Gifts for the Long Road
I came across a piece from Word on Fire — The Present You Want Is Not the Gift You Need—and it stirred something in me. It speaks of the quiet difference between a present and a gift, and how God, in His strange and patient way, offers us the latter. A present is what we reach for with eager hands; a gift is what shapes us, strengthens us, and sometimes saves us. The article became a small compass for my thoughts, and what follows is simply the path it opened.
We humans are short‑sighted travelers. We know what we want, or at least what we think we want, and we often demand it with the urgency of a child tugging at a parent’s sleeve. But wanting is not the same as needing, and the road ahead is longer than our vision can stretch.
A good parent knows this. A mother does not hand her child every shiny thing that catches their eye. A father does not surrender to every tantrum. Love is not indulgence; love is discernment. It is the courage to give what is good, even when it is not what is asked for.
And if this is true of earthly parents—who see only a little farther than their children—how much more true must it be of God? His gifts are rarely wrapped in the colors we expect. Sometimes they arrive disguised as delays, detours, or disappointments. Sometimes they feel like the very opposite of blessing. Yet they are given with a wisdom that sees beyond our horizon.
A present satisfies a moment. A gift shapes a life.
I am learning, slowly, to loosen my grip on the things I demand and to pay attention instead to the things I am given. They may not be what I wanted, but they may be exactly what I need for the next stretch of the journey.