This is part of my year-long series exploring human-centered alternatives to the spiritual promises in Oswald Chambers’ classic devotional My Utmost for His Highest. Today’s entry, “Yes, But…!”, demands that believers abandon rational thinking and “common sense” when they perceive divine commands, claiming that what appears “insane” by logical standards becomes perfectly clear once you “leap” in blind faith.
Here’s a different approach:
Elena had always been cautious with money. Growing up poor, she’d learned to save every dollar, plan every purchase, and never take financial risks. So when her friend Jamie pitched the idea of quitting their corporate jobs to start a sustainable farming cooperative, Elena’s first instinct was “Yes, but…”
“But what about health insurance? But what about our retirement savings? But what if the business fails?” The questions felt endless.
Jamie, meanwhile, seemed ready to leap. “Sometimes you have to trust the vision,” she insisted. “Analysis paralysis will kill any dream.”
Elena spent weeks wrestling with the decision. Not through prayer or divine guidance, but through research. She studied agricultural business models, analyzed local market demand for organic produce, and interviewed other farmers about their experiences. She calculated startup costs, projected revenues, and mapped out worst-case scenarios.
The more she researched, the more her “yes, but” questions became “yes, and” possibilities. Yes, they’d need health insurance, and they could join the farmers’ cooperative plan. Yes, they’d need startup capital, and Elena’s savings plus a small business loan could cover it. Yes, there were risks, and they could mitigate them with diverse crops and multiple revenue streams.
Elena’s decision to join the cooperative wasn’t a leap of faith—it was an informed choice based on careful analysis. She didn’t abandon common sense; she used it to transform uncertainty into manageable risk.
Two years later, their farm was thriving. Elena had found her answer not by silencing her rational concerns, but by taking them seriously enough to find practical solutions. Her “yes, but” questions hadn’t been obstacles to overcome—they’d been wisdom protecting her from reckless decisions while guiding her toward sustainable ones.
The leap she eventually took was calculated, not blind. And it felt more solid because of it.
Reflection Question: When have your careful questions and concerns led you to better decisions rather than holding you back?
This story is part of my upcoming book “The Undevoted: Daily Departures from Divine Dependence,” which offers 365 human-centered alternatives to the spiritual certainties in Chambers’ devotional. Each day explores how reason, community, and human resilience can address life’s challenges without requiring divine intervention.