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Nothing has Changed

byKylie Kristeen/August 16, 2023

Let’s get right to it today, friends. The premise of our conversations can be found in the title of this blog: While We’re Here… when life doesn’t go according to plan. Not sure about you, but things in my life look absolutely nothing like 16-year-old me envisioned. Some dreams I’ve let go, fully convinced that those came from my own mind and not the heart of my Father. 

And there are other dreams I’m still waiting to see come to pass. Those are the ones I’m fairly certain came from God. By the way, you’re one of those dreams. Two years ago I had an idea; one year ago – with lots of nudging and a very diligent friend who refused to let me lay it down – this website was launched. 

But there are still others that haven’t happened. On my good days, I can confidently add “yet” to the previous sentence. On worse days, it’s a knock-down-drag-out battle for my mustard seed of faith. But every day, I want us to encourage each other, to keep hope alive, and to keep our eyes fixed on the One who finishes what He starts. 

Just a reminder that

nothing has changed

about God’s plan for your life.

So in that spirit, I want to talk about a specific phrase that has been coming up a lot for me recently: Nothing has changed. I first heard this in a conversation with a close friend, and those words quickly became a lifeline to me in the midst of uncertainty.

A week later, while having a tiny breakdown over some of the aforementioned “yet” dreams in my heart, my mother said, “Kylie, nothing has changed about God’s plan for your life.”

I was fairly confident these words, while being uttered by those with whom I’m in close relationship, were not coming from the mind of man; the Holy Spirit was speaking to me.

Since I know that the rhema (spoken) word of God will not contradict His logos, or written word, I went to Scripture searching for biblical evidence of “nothing has changed.” After all, there is nothing new under the sun, and I needed to read the Word to believe my word. 

And here began the wrestling match between God’s truth and my ability to believe it. Enjoy my train of thought below…

Because there is nothing new under the sun, we need to read the Word to better believe the words spoken over us. 

People messed up God’s intention in the Garden of Eden, so couldn’t it be possible that I messed up God’s intention for my life, making it impossible for these “yet” dreams to come to pass? But nothing is impossible for God. So that can’t be it. 

The Israelites wandered for forty years and there was a whole generation who never set foot in the Promised Land because of their unbelief and idolatry and a mess of other stuff. So what if I’m like Moses and die with the promise in sight, never able to actually get there?

But I do believe, and I’m pretty sure there’s no golden calf in my living room. Also, you’re not Moses, Kylie… get over yourself. 

Let’s go back to God’s intention in the Garden – did people actually mess that up? God’s intention before the fall was for us to choose and enjoy Him. Isn’t that still His intention? 

So did we mess up God’s plan, or did He just accomplish it in an unexpected way? 

I don’t actually think anything changed. I think He just found a way to do it in spite of us. 

“Bingo,” said the Holy Spirit (probably).

Did we actually mess up God’s plan, or did He just find a way to do it in spite of us?

I went looking for scriptural evidence and found it in the whole entire Bible. But God is specific, and He reminded me of Paul’s experience on the island of Malta. Malta might be the physical embodiment of “when life doesn’t go according to plan,” so I dug into Acts 27 and 28 to see what I could learn. I’ll summarize for the sake of time. 

Paul is a prisoner – again – and has to get to Rome to stand before Caesar (that’s in Acts 25, but this whole thing kinda starts in chapter 23). He gets on a ship bound for Italy, and they encounter some mild storms, forcing them to sail the safe route for a while. This gave them more control over their circumstances (Pause… let the Holy Spirit minister that part for a sec…).

Then the storm intensifies, and despite Paul’s encouragement to pause the trip, they go on. They wind up throwing off cargo and even the tools necessary to sail successfully in an effort to stabilize things. Eventually we read that “the terrible storm raged for many days, blotting out the sun and the stars until at last all hope was gone” (Acts 27:20). 

Sometimes God gives us a destination, and we formulate our own route to arrive there, forgetting that He still holds the map.

No sun or stars meant no navigation day or night. They couldn’t know where they were or in what direction they were heading, and these are the conditions that precede the statement that all hope was lost. I related immediately to that sentiment. Maybe you can, too. 

But the thing is, Paul had a word from God. An angel appeared to him back in Acts 23:11 telling him that he must preach the gospel in Rome. Nothing had changed. Sometimes God gives us a destination, and we formulate our own route to arrive there, forgetting that He still holds the map. So in the midst of the storm, Paul declares, “…take courage, for I believe God. It will be just as He said” (Acts 27:25).

There is so much detail I’m skipping over for the sake of word count – like the fact that they cut the ties to lifeboats, so they had no backup survival plan. Because God isn’t interested in our backup plans. He is the whole plan all by Himself.

God isn’t interested in our backup plans.

He is the whole plan all by Himself.

The ship wrecks in Malta, where miracles and ministry take place, and after some time, Paul eventually arrives in Rome. Because nothing had changed. He was always going to Rome. He preached the gospel, just as God said he would. But the coolest part happens at the very end of the book of Acts…

Paul had been a homeless missionary for years, traveling place to place, establishing church after church. And he encountered opposition after opposition, leading to prison after prison. In fact, Paul’s most occupied home during his ministry was probably a jail cell, which makes the last two verses so meaningful:

For two whole years Paul stayed there in his own rented house and welcomed all who came to see him. He proclaimed the kingdom of God and taught about the Lord Jesus Christ—with all boldness and without hindrance!  Acts 28:30-31 NIV

The NLT says, “And no one tried to stop him.”

Preaching the gospel in his own home with no opposition. Paul made it to the promised land. And so will we. 

Nothing has changed.

Continue the conversation with the Word: Acts 23-28

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3 replies
  1. Reggie Hicks
    Reggie Hicks says:
    August 16, 2023 at 7:47 am

    Wow. Thank you for this reminder. Sometimes I find myself in situations where it felt like the calling was not on my life, but not only is the calling still there, his entire plan behind it still is. I just need to Step into it. Appreciate you!

    Reply
    • Kylie Kristeen
      Kylie Kristeen says:
      August 17, 2023 at 5:07 pm

      Yes!! Praise God for that revelation. It is so much easier to believe in what we see – praying that we have the grace and fortitude to truly walk by faith. What’s for us is still for us!

      Reply
  2. Danielthymn
    Danielthymn says:
    March 5, 2025 at 8:14 am

    Wow news for all us

    Reply

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