Nothing Is Too Small for God: How Focused Faith Unlocks Answered Prayer

Have you ever hesitated to bring something before God because it felt too ordinary, too small, too trivial for the Creator of the universe? Maybe it was a problem at work, a frustration with your car, an issue with your internet or utilities. Something in you whispered, “God has bigger things to deal with.” But the truth of Scripture dismantles that thinking entirely. 1 Peter 5:7 does not say “cast your big spiritual cares” on Him. It says, “Cast all your care upon Him, for He cares for you.” All. Every single one. Because prayer is not primarily about the object of the request — it is about the relationship between the person and their God.

God Cares About What Concerns You

One of the most freeing realizations in the Christian life is this: if something matters to you, it matters to God. Not because your concern is cosmically significant, but because you are significant to Him. He is not a God who responds only to grand, theological petitions. He is a Father who notices. Matthew 10:30 says He knows the very number of hairs on your head. That is not a metaphor for general awareness, that is the language of intimate attention. When we minimize our desires and tell ourselves they are not worth bringing to God, we are essentially rejecting the invitation He has already extended. Psalm 37:4 says He will give you the desires of your heart. He designed you with desires for a reason. Bring them. All of them. Stop filtering your prayer life based on what you think qualifies as a spiritual enough request.

The Issue Is Often Not Power, It Is Focus

God already possesses all power. That is not in question. But creation itself offers a powerful illustration: God had all power before the beginning, yet creation manifested when He focused and spoke. The distinction between sunlight and a laser is not the energy source, it is concentration. Sunlight warms; a laser cuts through steel. The same principle applies to prayer and faith. Desire alone is not enough. Repeated anxious petitions are not enough. James 1:6-8 warns that the double-minded person, believing one moment and doubting the next, should not expect to receive anything. What produces results is faith that is focused, stable, and aligned with what God has already said. Genesis 11:6 records God saying of unified, focused human imagination: “Nothing will be restrained from them.” Imagine what focused, Spirit-led faith can do. Prayer that is grounded in belief and directed with clarity becomes a laser, not scattered light.

Believe Before You See, Then Live Like You Believe

Mark 11:24 is direct: “What things soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them.” Faith does not wait for evidence before it believes, faith is the evidence (Hebrews 11:1). This means that after you pray, the work is in aligning how you think, what you say, and how you live with what you have asked God for. This is not pretending. This is agreement. You raise your belief, you raise your imagination of what God can do, you bring your conversation into alignment with your prayer, and you live consistently with what you believe He has already done. Doubt contaminates faith the way a drop of food coloring changes a glass of water. Single-mindedness, consistency, and patience allow what you have asked for to fully form and manifest in your life.

Pray today with confidence and expectation. Nothing you are facing is outside the reach of a Father who cares. Focus your faith, align your life with your belief, and let God be God — in the big things and the small ones too.

-Terrence Burton

Pressing Toward the Mark

Spiritual growth is rarely, if ever accidental. Scripture presents it as a deliberate pursuit—steady, focused, and forward-looking. The Christian life is not described as standing still, but as moving toward something God has already set ahead.

Paul writes with striking clarity: “This one thing I do, forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are before” (Philippians 3:13 KJV). His language is active and intentional. The past—whether success or failure—is not allowed to govern the present. Growth requires release. To press forward means to refuse to be anchored by what God has already addressed or accomplished. Paul’s focus is singular, not scattered.

He continues, “I press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus” (Philippians 3:14 KJV). The “mark” is direction, not destination. It represents alignment with God’s calling rather than personal comfort. The prize is not earthly recognition but participation in God’s purpose. This pursuit is echoed elsewhere when Paul urges believers to “run, that ye may obtain” (1 Corinthians 9:24 KJV). Effort does not replace grace—it responds to it.

Hebrews uses similar imagery, calling believers to “run with patience the race that is set before us” (Hebrews 12:1 KJV). The race is set—assigned by God, not chosen at random. Patience is required because progress is often slower than expectation. The passage also reminds us to lay aside weights, not only sins. Anything that slows forward motion, even if lawful, can hinder growth.

Pressing forward is sustained by hope. Paul tells the Romans that “hope maketh not ashamed” (Romans 5:5 KJV). Hope provides endurance, especially when the finish line feels distant. It keeps the believer oriented toward what God is doing, not merely what is happening. Forward movement, in Scripture, is rarely dramatic—but it is always faithful.

To press toward the mark is to live with direction, discipline, and expectation. It is not driven by perfection, but by perseverance.

Takeaway: Spiritual maturity grows when the heart stays focused on where God is leading, not where it has been.