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Friday, May 15, 2026

Verse of the Day for Friday, May 15, 2026

 

Verse of the Day for May 15, 2026

Ecclesiastes 11:5

Trusting the God Who Does All

“As you don’t know what is the way of the wind, nor how the bones grow in the womb of her who is with child; even so you don’t know the work of God who does all.”

The Word Before Us

There are parts of life that remain hidden from us no matter how carefully we watch, study, plan, or pray. We can feel the wind on our face without knowing where it has traveled. We can stand in wonder before the mystery of life forming in the womb without understanding every unseen movement of God’s design. Ecclesiastes 11:5 invites us into that holy humility. It does not ask us to despise knowledge or to avoid wisdom. Instead, it reminds us that human understanding has limits, while God’s work is larger, deeper, and more faithful than we can see.

This verse speaks gently to the person who wants every answer before taking the next faithful step. It teaches us that trust is not built on knowing everything. Trust is built on knowing the One who “does all.”

Understanding the Context

Ecclesiastes is written in the voice of the Preacher, or Teacher, who reflects honestly on life under the sun. The book wrestles with labor, pleasure, grief, injustice, time, death, wisdom, and the limits of human control. It does not offer shallow answers. It tells the truth about the world as we often experience it: beautiful and frustrating, meaningful and mysterious, full of gifts and yet marked by uncertainty.

Ecclesiastes 11 appears near the closing movement of the book. The surrounding verses call the reader to live wisely and generously even when the outcome cannot be fully known. Just before this verse, the Teacher speaks of casting bread upon the waters and giving a portion to many, because we do not know what trouble may come. Just after it, he urges the reader to sow seed in the morning and not withhold the hand in the evening, because we do not know which effort will prosper.

In that setting, Ecclesiastes 11:5 is not a call to passive resignation. It is a call to faithful action under the care of a mysterious and sovereign God. The Teacher acknowledges that we do not know the path of the wind or the hidden formation of life in the womb. In the same way, we do not fully know the work of God. Context matters because the verse is not meant to make us fearful of what we cannot understand. It is meant to free us from the burden of pretending we can see everything God is doing.

Living the Verse Today

Many of us carry questions that have no quick answer. We wonder why certain prayers seem delayed, why some doors close, why suffering lingers, why good efforts appear unnoticed, or why God’s timing seems so different from our own. Ecclesiastes 11:5 does not scold us for wondering. It simply places our wondering inside a larger truth: God is at work even when his work is hidden from our eyes.

This matters deeply for daily Christian life. Faith does not mean that we understand every circumstance. Prayer does not mean that God explains every mystery before we obey. Discipleship often means sowing seed in the morning while trusting God with the harvest we cannot yet see. We speak a kind word, offer forgiveness, serve quietly, give generously, pray faithfully, and continue walking with Christ, not because we know exactly how everything will turn out, but because we trust the God who does all things well.

There is comfort in admitting that we are not God. We do not have to carry the weight of omniscience. We are called to faithfulness, not control. We are called to reverent trust, not anxious speculation. When life feels uncertain, this verse invites us to rest in the mystery of God’s hidden work and to keep doing the good that lies before us. The wind still moves. Life still forms in secret. God still works in ways we cannot trace, and his hands are never idle.

Reflection

Where is God inviting you to trust his hidden work today, even though you cannot yet see how everything will unfold?


The Bible texts are from the World English Bible (WEB), which is a Public Domain Modern English translation of the Holy Bible. The World English Bible is based on the American Standard Version (ASV) of the Holy Bible, first published in 1901, the Biblia Hebraica Stuttgartensia Old Testament, and the Greek Majority Text New Testament. It is in draft form and is currently being edited for accuracy and readability. Verse of the Day is a daily inspirational and encouraging Bible verse, extracted from BibleGateway.com. Commentary by Kenny Sallee, ThM. All rights reserved.

Daily Devotions for Friday, May 15, 2026: The Hunger Beneath the Journey

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The Daily Devotional

Friday, May 15, 2026

The Hunger Beneath the Journey

“Jesus said to them, ‘I am the bread of life. Whoever comes to me will not be hungry, and whoever believes in me will never be thirsty.’” — John 6:35

Reflection

On May 15, 1940, the first McDonald’s opened its doors in San Bernardino, California. At the time, it was not yet the global name people know today. It began as a roadside restaurant in a changing American West, a place where automobiles, highways, family travel, and quick meals were beginning to reshape everyday life. People were taking to the road in new ways. The country was becoming more mobile. Families, workers, travelers, and dreamers needed places to stop, eat, rest, and continue on their way.

There is something deeply human about that picture. A person traveling across the desert, watching the road stretch ahead beneath the California sun, eventually feels the need to stop. Hunger has a way of interrupting even the most exciting journey. No matter how beautiful the scenery, no matter how carefully planned the route, the body reminds us that we are not self-sufficient. We need nourishment. We need rest. We need places along the way where we can pause and be renewed.

That ordinary roadside need points us toward a deeper spiritual truth. In John 6:35, Jesus says, “I am the bread of life.” He spoke these words after feeding a large crowd with loaves and fish. Many had followed Him because they had seen the miracle and had eaten their fill. They knew what it meant to be physically hungry, and they knew what it meant to receive bread in an unexpected place. Yet Jesus gently moved their attention beyond the meal itself. He wanted them to see that the deepest hunger of the human heart cannot be satisfied by bread alone.

This does not mean physical needs are unimportant. Jesus cared for hungry people. He fed them. He noticed their weariness. He met them in real places with real needs. The Christian faith is not detached from the body, the road, the workday, the kitchen table, or the journey home. But Jesus also knew that people could have full stomachs and still carry empty souls. They could eat bread and still hunger for forgiveness. They could drink water and still thirst for peace. They could travel far and still not know where they were truly going.

Most of us understand this better than we might admit. We know what it is like to stop for a quick meal on a long road trip. The food may be welcome. The coffee may help. A few minutes away from the steering wheel can make the next stretch of highway easier. But after a while, hunger returns. The body needs another meal. The traveler needs another stop. Convenience helps us continue, but it cannot become the destination.

Life can be that way too. We reach for things that help us get through the day. A busy schedule, a familiar routine, a favorite meal, a good conversation, a quiet evening, or a brief distraction can all have their place. These are not bad gifts. Many of them are blessings. Yet none of them can carry the full weight of the soul. When we ask created things to satisfy the hunger only God can fill, we eventually find ourselves restless again.

Jesus does not shame us for being hungry. He invites us to come to Him. His words are not cold or distant. They are full of mercy: “Whoever comes to me will not be hungry, and whoever believes in me will never be thirsty.” Christ offers more than a temporary pause along the road. He offers Himself. He is nourishment for the weary, forgiveness for the burdened, direction for the confused, and companionship for those who feel alone on the journey.

The opening of a roadside restaurant in 1940 reminds us how much the world was changing. Roads were stretching farther. Cars were carrying people into new possibilities. Meals were becoming quicker, and travel was becoming part of American life. But beneath every changing age, the human heart remains the same. We still need more than speed. We still need more than convenience. We still need more than enough food for the next few hours. We need the living Christ, who meets us not only at the altar, but also on the highway, in the desert, at the kitchen table, in the hospital room, and in the quiet places where our deeper hunger begins to speak.

Today, the practical invitation is simple: pay attention to what your soul is reaching for. When you feel tired, anxious, restless, or empty, do not only ask, “What can I do to get through this?” Also ask, “Lord, what hunger are You revealing in me?” Take time to come to Christ honestly. Open Scripture. Pray without pretending. Receive His presence as daily bread. Let Him feed what hurry cannot feed and restore what convenience cannot reach.

The road may still be long. The day may still be busy. The responsibilities may still be waiting. But Christ does not merely hand us something for the journey; He walks the road with us. He is the bread that satisfies, the rest that steadies, and the hope that leads us home.

Prayer

Lord Jesus, Bread of Life, we come to You with the hungers we can name and the deeper longings we often hide. Meet us on the roads we travel today, whether they are busy, weary, uncertain, or full of change. Teach us to receive ordinary blessings with gratitude, but never to mistake them for the fullness only You can give. Feed our souls with Your grace, guide our steps with Your wisdom, and help us find our rest in Your faithful presence. Amen.


Devotional by: Kenny Sallee, ThM — Deming, NM, USA

The Bible texts are from the The World English Bible (WEB), which is a Public Domain Modern English translation of the Holy Bible. The World English Bible is based on the American Standard Version (ASV) of the Holy Bible, first published in 1901, the Biblia Hebraica Stuttgartensia Old Testament, and the Greek Majority Text New Testament. It is in draft form and is currently being edited for accuracy and readability. All rights reserved.