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The Daily Devotional
Tuesday, April 21, 2026
When God Turns the Tide
“For the battle is not yours but God’s.” — 2 Chronicles 20:15b
Reflection
These words were first spoken into a moment of fear. King Jehoshaphat and the people of Judah were facing an overwhelming threat. Multiple armies were coming against them, and the situation looked grim. They did not have the strength, the strategy, or the certainty to meet such a crisis on their own. In that hour, God’s message through the prophet was not merely tactical advice. It was a call to remember who truly rules history. “For the battle is not yours but God’s.” It did not mean the people would have no part to play. They still had to stand, trust, move forward, and witness what God would do. But it did mean that the outcome did not finally rest on human strength alone.
That truth echoes powerfully when we remember the Battle of San Jacinto on April 21, 1836. The struggle for Texas independence had been marked by uncertainty, loss, exhaustion, and fear. There had been retreat, confusion, and the heavy shadow of what seemed like a stronger enemy. Yet on that decisive day, the battle turned with astonishing speed. In roughly eighteen minutes, what had looked like a long and uncertain conflict was suddenly and dramatically reversed. History pivoted in less time than it takes to finish a cup of coffee or drive across a small town. One fierce, brief moment changed the course of the conflict and opened the door to a new future.
That is one of the humbling patterns of life: battles can feel long before they turn fast. We may live for weeks, months, or even years under a burden that seems unmovable. We pray, wait, endure, and wonder whether anything is changing at all. The strain lingers. The silence stretches. The problem keeps standing there like a wall that refuses to crack. Then, in a moment we did not script and could not force, God turns the tide. A conversation softens. A door opens. A diagnosis improves. A provision comes. A hardened heart yields. A deep peace enters where panic had ruled. The battle that seemed endless suddenly shifts.
Many of us know what it is like to live on the wrong side of an unanswered prayer. We know the fatigue of carrying grief that does not lift quickly, the ache of family strain, the fear of financial pressure, the slow drag of illness, or the discouragement of trying to remain faithful while nothing seems to improve. The danger in such seasons is not only the pain itself, but the quiet lie that says this is how it will always be. That lie grows in the dark. It whispers that defeat is certain, that hope is naïve, and that change is no longer possible. But scripture repeatedly reminds us that God is not bound by the pace of our despair. The Lord who sees the whole field can act in ways that our limited vision cannot imagine.
Think of an ordinary scene from daily life. A rancher watches the sky over dry ground after weeks without rain. The pasture is brittle. The tanks are low. Dust rises with every step. Day after day, the clouds form and disappear without yielding anything. The land seems locked into its hardship. Then one afternoon the wind shifts. The air cools. The clouds gather with purpose instead of teasing. Rain begins to fall, first in scattered drops, then in a steady shower. By evening the earth is drinking deeply, the animals are calmer, and the whole landscape has changed. The drought did not end because the rancher controlled the heavens. It ended because what had looked stalled was never outside the reach of God.
So it is with many of the battles we face. We are called to faithfulness in the waiting, but we are also called to leave room in our hearts for holy surprise. God may not always turn the battle in the way we expect, and he does not promise a life free from wounds or struggle. But he does remain present, powerful, and active. Sometimes he turns the battle outwardly, by changing the circumstances. Sometimes he turns it inwardly, by giving us courage, clarity, endurance, and peace even before the outward victory arrives. Sometimes the miracle is the sudden resolution. Sometimes the miracle is the sudden strengthening of the soul. In both cases, the hand of God is at work.
There is also a gentle correction here for those of us who carry everything as though it all depends on us. We often fight in our own strength until we are spiritually exhausted. We rehearse every worst-case scenario. We grip every burden as though clenched hands can produce control. Yet the word to Jehoshaphat still stands: the battle is not yours but God’s. That truth does not make us passive; it makes us prayerful. It does not excuse avoidance; it invites surrender. It frees us to do the next right thing without pretending we must carry the universe on our shoulders.
So today, bring your battle honestly before the Lord. Name it. Do not minimize it, but do not crown it either. Refuse to treat the struggle as greater than the God who stands over it. Take the practical step in front of you. Make the call. Offer the apology. Attend the appointment. Keep the promise. Pray again. Rest tonight. And while you do, leave room for the possibility that God can turn more in a day than you have been able to change in a year.
April 21 and San Jacinto remind us that history can pivot in a single hour. Scripture reminds us that God still works in ways that overturn fear and make a road through what seemed blocked. What looks prolonged to us is never beyond his reach. What feels nearly lost is not beyond his power. Stay faithful. Stay prayerful. Stay open to grace. The Lord who holds the battle is still able to turn the tide.
Prayer
Gracious and mighty God, when our battles feel long, heavy, and beyond our strength, teach us to remember that we do not stand alone. Give us courage when we are afraid, patience when the answer seems delayed, and faith when the outcome is hidden from us. Help us to do what is ours to do with steadiness and trust, while placing into your hands what only you can carry. Turn the battles within us and around us according to your wisdom and mercy. Bring peace where there is turmoil, hope where there is discouragement, and unexpected deliverance where we have nearly given up. Keep our hearts open to your timing, your power, and your grace. Amen.
Devotional by: Kenny Sallee, ThM — Deming, NM, USA
The Bible texts are from the New Revised Standard Version (NRSV) Bible, copyright © 1989, 1993, the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
