In the Meantime P3, When Doubt Meets a God of the Impossible

Scripture

“Abraham fell facedown; he laughed and said to himself, ‘Will a son be born to a man a hundred years old? Will Sarah bear a child at the age of ninety?’ And Abraham said to God, ‘If only Ishmael might live under your blessing!’” — Genesis 17:17–18 (NIV)

Even the father of faith had moments of doubt. When God renewed His promise, Abraham laughed—not out of mockery, but out of sheer incredulity. How could a hundred-year-old man and a ninety-year-old woman bear a child? From Abraham’s perspective, the promise seemed too late, too impossible.

So Abraham did what many of us do in the meantime: he looked for an alternative. He prayed, “If only Ishmael might live under your blessing!” It was as though he was saying, “Lord, just bless what I already have—don’t ask me to believe for more.”

But God’s promises are not limited by our understanding or our timelines. He wasn’t content to bless Abraham’s plan—He had His own, greater plan. The child of promise would come through Sarah, not Hagar. God’s ways remind us that faith is not about lowering expectations but about trusting His power to do the impossible.

Acknowledge your doubts: God can handle your honest questions and moments of weakness. Bring them to Him in prayer.

Don’t settle for substitutes: Sometimes we cling to “Ishmaels” of our own making. But God’s promises are always better than what we can produce in our own strength.

Believe the impossible: Faith isn’t pretending the odds don’t exist—it’s trusting God beyond them.

Just a thought:
Even Abraham laughed at God’s promise, thinking it impossible at his age. But God’s plans are greater than our doubts—He calls us to trust Him for the impossible.

Abraham laughed at God’s promise, thinking it was too late. Yet God proved nothing is impossible. Trust Him beyond your doubts—His plans always prevail.

Sometimes we ask God to bless our “Ishmaels,” but He has greater plans. Don’t settle for less—trust His promise, even when it feels impossible.

Faith isn’t denying reality—it’s trusting God beyond it. Like Abraham, bring your doubts to Him and believe that His promises are always bigger than your limitations.

When Abraham struggled to believe, God still remained faithful. Your doubts don’t cancel His promises. Trust Him—because His Word always stands.

Prayer                                                                                                                          Father, when I am tempted to laugh in doubt or settle for less, remind me that nothing is impossible for You. Teach me to trust not in my own plans but in Your perfect promises. Strengthen my faith to believe for the impossible. In Jesus’name, Amen.

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