April 1, 2026
Genesis 45:8 (NASB) I was sitting at a traffic light recently when the Lord whispered, “Laurie, make sure your thinking rightly matches where you are.” I knew immediately what He was talking about. It wasn’t that I was confused about my situation; it was that I needed to make sure that my thinking was aligned with His about it. I knew He was right. Since Debby’s passing, the thought patterns that have governed me for 32+ years in a support role do not exactly align with my labor in the lead role. Stepping into this “new” position that I don’t feel quite equipped for has awakened the feelings I had back in ’92; back when it took everything in me just to leave my job and work full-time at Racerunners. Now, sitting at that traffic light all these years later I realized in many ways that I’m right back there again. As I let what He said continue to sink in, it wasn’t 48 hours later when He gave me a word that was the anchor my wandering thoughts needed: “It was not you who sent me here, but God” (Gen. 45:8). It changed my perspective entirely. It is Joseph’s powerful declaration to his brothers who, 22 years earlier, had thrown him into a pit to die and then sold him into slavery. When they came to the palace during the famine seeking to buy food, the thinking that governed Joseph is the thinking that guided him. As his brothers stood there stunned, scared and speechless, Joseph said to them, “Please come close…don’t be grieved! God sent me ahead of you…to ensure that you would live…and has saved your lives through this marvelous act of deliverance” (vss. 3-7 TPT). Wow. If ever there was a master class in renewing the mind, Joseph’s story would surely rank among the top. He paints an extraordinary picture of what it looks like to align our thinking with God’s in the midst of challenging and painful circumstances. Interestingly, nothing is mentioned about Joseph’s inner journey or the pain he suffered in the years close after his brothers’ betrayal. We know something significant transpired, however. We learn that he named his firstborn child Manasseh which means, “God has made me forget all my trouble and all my father’s household” (Gen. 41:51) and his second “Ephraim” which means, “God has made me fruitful in the land of my affliction” (vs. 52). Clearly, something had taken place in Joseph’s heart that changed him. Oh, how affliction can promote fruitfulness in our lives like nothing else will if we let it. By the time his brothers arrived all those years later, his mind was powerfully aligned with God’s. It cleared the way for him to fully understand and embrace the fact that though his brothers might have sold him God sent him. It rewrote the story that the enemy could have so easily written into Joseph’s life, his brother’s lives, his family and the future of Israel, had Joseph not responded. “Even though you intended to hurt me, God intended it for good. It was His plan all along, to ensure the survival of many people” (Gen. 50:20 TPT), not the least of which was his own. God has sent all of us somewhere. Wherever we are (emotionally, relationally, vocationally, mentally, etc.) we have a greater advantage than Joseph ever did: “We have the mind of Christ” (1 Cor. 2:16). As we encounter life and thoughts flood our minds, we can engage His. When we turn back the battle “at the gate” (Is. 28:6); when we run our thinking through the grid of God’s word and Spirit, it filters out what is contrary and enables us to rightly align our mind with His. We can think about our situations the way God does and settle on what is true, right and good. It doesn’t mean we just dismiss or deny the realities of what we’re walking through; but as we grapple with the complexities involved, we choose to see “further than what’s going on in the natural and reach out after the things in the Spirit” (Rom. 8:5 Phillips), knowing He has a purpose and a plan. It is the only way to effectively manage the passions our minds are met with and steer them in an eternal direction. When we do, it is a gold mine in the Spirit. It may challenge our senses beyond what we think we’re able, but “God can be trusted not to allow us to suffer any temptation beyond our powers of endurance. He always provides a way of escape so that we will be able to endure it and keep moving forward” (1 Cor. 10:13 Phillips/Voice). Beloved, may God bless you in the knowledge that whatever you may find yourself walking through, “God sent you there.” Perhaps not directly, but if He allowed it to get to you, He’s got something in it for you…above and beyond what you presently may be able to conceive or imagine. As you walk it out, may your thinking be aligned with His. Recommended Worship: 1. Moving Forward – Free Chapel Live with Ricardo Sanchez 2. Sound Mind – Melissa Helser 3. Medley: Hosanna/Moving Forward/Where Else Can I Go – Israel Houghton & New Breed