Sometimes life feels like a wasteland. Maybe you’re holding onto pain from a relationship that didn’t turn out as you hoped. Or perhaps you’re burdened by the death of a dream or discouraged by unanswered prayers. Maybe the daily routine of groceries, bills, and doctor’s appointments makes you wonder if God even notices you anymore.
I know that feeling. And I think Moses did, too.
When we meet Moses in Exodus 3, he isn’t in a temple, nor is he deep in prayer. He’s not expecting a spiritual encounter. He’s just at work — tending sheep on Mount Horeb, a place whose very name means “wasteland.” (If there’s a less likely place to encounter God, I don’t know it.)
Moses had been through a lot. Rescued as a baby from Pharaoh’s cruel decree, raised in the palace but deeply aware of his Hebrew identity, he carried a complicated past. One rash act — killing an Egyptian overseer — caused him to run for his life. In Midian, far from the drama of his youth, he settled into a life of anonymity. He married, became a father, and tried to build a quiet life.
The Moses who once held the future of a people in his hands now lived in obscurity, walking the same desolate hills day after day. I imagine he was tired. Maybe a bit cynical. Maybe convinced that his life’s most meaningful chapters were behind him.
But then: a bush ablaze — full of flames but not consumed.
Moses wasn’t looking for God. But God was looking for Moses.
Curiosity tugged Moses forward. He moved closer, maybe squinting at the strange sight. And it’s only once Moses draws near that God speaks his name: “Moses, Moses.”
God tells him, “Take off your sandals, for the place where you are standing is holy ground.”
Holy ground? Here? In the wasteland?
Yes.
We have a God who turns wastelands into holy places, who transforms the everyday into sacred, and who takes a shepherd in hiding and names him a deliverer.
Moses didn’t see himself as qualified. He rattled off excuses: I’m not a good speaker. People won’t trust me. I’m just a nobody. And maybe you’ve whispered the same excuses: I’m too old. I’m too tired. I’m too young. I’m not spiritual enough. I’ve messed up too much.
But for every excuse Moses offered, God had an answer: “I will be with you.”
Maybe you feel like you’re wandering in a wasteland right now. Like you’re weighed down with disappointment or regret. Maybe you feel that your life is unremarkable… and, if you’re being honest, forgettable.
But God sees you. God calls your name. You may not get a burning bush, but God is still in this business of pursuing us, of interrupting us. God is still stirring our curiosity and surprising us with grace. We just have to pay attention.
What if your weekday morning is precisely where God wants to meet you? What if the load of laundry, the school pickup line, or the work meeting is not wasted space but sacred ground?
The mystery of God is that we don’t always find certainty, but we do find presence. And in that presence, wastelands change.
The very place where Moses hid became the starting point for his calling. His ordinary day turned into a holy encounter that transformed everything.
What might happen if you stayed curious, too? If you moved toward and opened yourself to the possibility that God is nearer than you imagined?
Take off your shoes. Right here, right now, you’re on holy ground.
Hello,
I want to let you know that God used today’s message to encourage me. Thank you for your ministry.
Janet (UK)
Hi, Janet! I am so grateful these words resonated with you today. I hope you have a good weekend!
Wow. Very thought provoking. I suspect this will be an interesting day if I keep this in mind.
Thank you.
How did your day go, Madeline? Thank you for reading!
This spoke to me today too. I feel like God has given me some ideas where I can be useful. Thanks!
So grateful that these words spoke to you, Gail. Thank you for reading! Have a lovely weekend!
Dear Kayla, I really enjoyed your story and it’s encouraging words as I read on. I think I needed these words as I do have a problem with people thinking that I don’t do anything, but I am not someone who tells many what I am actually going through, so they think that smile that I always have that smile on my face. Living in a senior facility and just turning 78 is difficult as there are 100 residents here and you can’t and don’t have time to talk to everyone, but God did nudge me towards people He knew would accept me the way I am. Sometimes I feel that God has forgotten me, but your story have taught me that He is always with me and I also think that my Holy ground is in my apartment as for some reason, I always take my shoes off when I am in here. I feel like that is where God finds me as I pray for help and tell Him my story. Yesterday, I had a very emotional day, but today after reading your devotional, I am going to start out my day on a positive way. Thank you Kayla for your very wise words today, but I always learn something or receive help to sort out my serious problems by all of you (in)courage women who I feel were sent here to help people like me. I found your community by my Holy Spirit nudged me to check out this community. Praise the Lord for that. I send my love and respect to you as this is exactly what I needed today after the way yesterday went……………………Betsy Basile
Betsy, you are right, God has not forgotten about you! I hope you are feeling seen and known today as we go into the weekend. Thank you for reading and for sharing a glimpse of your life with us. We are honored to share over here at (in)courage!
Love this! I love the story of how God called Moses. I can relate to Moses as I’m not a good speaker- I often stumble over my words. Thank you for sharing this super encouraging devotional! Praise God that He is with us.
Yes, so grateful that we don’t have a God who looks at us from afar but draws near to be with us. I’m honored you found these words encouraging. Have a great weekend!
Kayla yes God does turn or wasteland into Holy ground in our lives. We may mess up with sin or do things that are wrong in God’s eyes not meaning to but we do. We are not perfect we will still sin and do things that are wrong. Then we regret it say why did I do that again. We may say why would God want me in my wasteland full of sin. I keep messaging up and doing wrong in God’s when I shouldn’t and the same sins time and time again. Then fell offal why do I keep doing that same sin when I know I shouldn’t do it or give into it when it wrong in God’s eyes. Then we can feel like the Wasteland that nobody help tidy up or maintain. It stays a wasteland. We can feel like that in our lives when we sin. But then if we go to God in prayer asking him to forgive us that sin we knew was wrong in his eye’s. God will and help us change our wasteland in Holy ground for him. That we because beautiful again for the Lord and our wasteland is our lives being refreshed and all the sin taken away never to be remembered about again. Every day we can ask God to help us not do the sin again. Keep our wasteland lives beautiful and blooming for God. Letting God water us to be the Person he want us to be. That the world see we have been restored and made beautiful in God’s eyes in his way. I say Amen to that. It not easy been there but with God’s help we can do it. Love Dawn Ferguson-Little Enniskillen Co.Fermanagh N.Ireland xx
Thank you for sharing, Dawn! Thank goodness for grace. May you feel God’s love for you as we head into the weekend. Thank you for reading!
Yes, so grateful that we don’t have a God who looks at us from afar but draws near to be with us. I’m honored you found these words encouraging. Have a great weekend!
Kayla,
10+ years ago I was caregiving for my aging dad. One day I visited him at assisted living during lunch. He was having trouble feeding himself. I offered to do it for him & he said yes. The man to the right of us said “You will get stars in your crown for this.” Wow! I felt like God saw me.
Now I have a good job that Jesus gave me. I’m regretting past job choices. Wishing I had stayed at certain companies. We can’t change the past but we can thank God for the provisions.
Blessings 🙂