May 1, 2026

What to Do When You're Afraid God Is Asking Too Much

What to Do When You're Afraid God Is Asking Too Much
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There are moments when what God seems to be asking feels like more than you can offer. In this episode, discover what it looks like to keep moving toward God when the ask feels like too much, fear and all.

Basil Scott was 8 years old when the Japanese army took over his boarding school in Shanghai. His parents weren't with him. He spent the next 3 years in a prisoner of war camp, a child on starvation rations with no way to reach his family. At 10, he contracted meningitis and was paralyzed down one side. The mission doctor who treated him called his survival one of 2 miracle cases in the camp.

He made it home after liberation in 1945, came to faith as a young man in England, and began building a life that had nothing to do with Asia.

Then in November 1955, he heard Billy Graham preach on sacrifice at Cambridge. And somewhere in that room, Basil felt God asking him a question he didn't want to answer. He described what followed as an overwhelming call back to Asia as a missionary, back to the part of the world that had taken 3 years of his childhood and almost taken his life.

He had every reason to say no. He went anyway.

Most of us will never face anything like what Basil faced. But a lot of us know what it feels like to be in front of something God is asking that feels like more than we have. The cost is too high and you've been going for a long time, and the question you keep coming back to is whether God knows what He's doing.

This episode takes that question seriously. Jeremiah told God he felt deceived. Abraham climbed a mountain without knowing how it would end. Both of them kept moving toward God while carrying everything they were afraid of. Through Basil's story and Jeremiah 20:7-9, this episode looks at what faith under pressure looks like in practice, and what God asks of the person who is running low.

I've been in that place. When I was in college studying music, God started nudging me toward pastoral ministry. I'm an introvert. Standing in front of people and speaking isn't how I'm wired. My first response was that God had the wrong person. Forty-five years later, I know He didn't. But at the time, what He was asking felt like more than I had.

BY THE TIME YOU FINISH LISTENING, YOU'LL DISCOVER:

  • Why Jeremiah's complaint to God in Jeremiah 20 is one of the most underappreciated pictures of faith in Scripture
  • What Abraham's reasoning in Hebrews 11 reveals about how to keep moving when the circumstances make no sense
  • One concrete step you can take today if you're carrying something that feels like more than you have

God rarely shows the full picture before He asks you to take the first step. The picture comes into focus as you walk.

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Basil Scott was eight years old when the Japanese army

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took over his boarding school in Shanghai, and his parents

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weren't with him. He spent the next three years inside a

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prisoner of war camp, a child living on starvation rations

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with no way to reach his family. When he was ten, he contracted

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meningitis and was paralyzed down one side, unconscious for

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five days. The mission doctor who treated him called his

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survival "one of the two miracle cases in the camp." and began

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building a life that had nothing to do with Asia. Then, in 1955,

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he went to hear Billy Graham speak at Cambridge. Graham

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preached on sacrifice, and somewhere in that room Basil

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felt God asking him a question he didn't want to answer. He

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described what followed as an overwhelming call back to Asia

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as a missionary, back to the part of the world that had taken

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three years of his childhood and had almost taken his life.

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through all of his knowledge. He had every reason to say no, and

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he went anyway. We'll come back to what happened when he got

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there. But first…

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Welcome to Daily Devotions For Busy Lives. I'm Bart Leger. When

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I was in college, I was torn between engineering and music. I

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eventually opted for a music degree with a major in voice,

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and that was the plan. Then, God started nudging me toward

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ministry. I need to tell you something about myself; standing

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in front of people and speaking isn't how I'm wired. I'm an

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introvert. My first response to that call was that God had the

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wrong person, and I told him so. felt like more than I had to

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give and I didn't hesitate to tell him. That willingness to

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say the uncomfortable thing to God is what today's episode is

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about. There are moments when what God seems to be asking

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feels like more than you can offer. What he's asking costs

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you more than you have. You've been going for a long time, and

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the end isn't in sight. The question you keep coming back to

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is whether God knows what he's doing. Here's today's passage.

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It's Jeremiah 20: 7-9, Oh, Lord, you misled me, and I allowed

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myself to be misled. You are stronger than I am, and you

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overpowered me. Now I am mocked every day, everyone laughs at me.

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When I speak, the words burst out. Violence and destruction, I

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shout. So these messages from the Lord have made me a

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household joke.

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This is Jeremiah, one of the great prophets of Scripture,

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telling God he feels deceived. He's exhausted and he's

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humiliated, saying, "All of it directly to God." But Jeremiah's

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faith was strong enough to be brutally honest with the one who

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can handle it. Many of us grew up thinking that was taboo. You

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weren't supposed to say things like that to God. We were told

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it's a sin to question God. We were taught that doubt's

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dangerous and that struggle means something's wrong in our

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life. That when God asks something costly, the faithful

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thing is to smile and say yes without flinching. Well, tell

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that to Jeremiah. He told God exactly how he felt. And then he

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kept going anyway. The fire in his bones is what matters most

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in that passage. He tried to quit. He told himself he would

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stop speaking in God's name. And he couldn't because the word

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wouldn't stay down. The call was stronger than his exhaustion.

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Abraham carried this same tension on a different

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assignment. Genesis 22 records God asking Abraham to sacrifice

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his son, the son he had waited decades for, the son through

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whom every promise had been made. Abraham didn't have an

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explanation and he didn't have a map. He had a call and a God

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whose character he had decided to trust. And he went up the

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mountain without knowing how it would end. Hebrews 11: 19 gives

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us a window into what Abraham was thinking. Abraham was

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thinking. He reasoned that God could raise the dead. He wasn't

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pretending the situation wasn't devastating. What he was doing

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was he was anchoring himself in what he knew about God's

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character when the circumstances made no sense whatsoever. This

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is what faith under pressure looks like. You keep moving

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toward God even when the ask feels like more than you have.

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You bring the fear with you. Let me say something directly to the

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person in that place right now. What God is asking may feel like

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more than you have. He may be about to show you what he can do

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with what you don't have. Jeremiah was worn out and he was

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mocked. Abraham was climbing a mountain without a plan. Both

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ended up doing things they couldn't have pictured from

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where they stood. I know you're exhausted. I know you're afraid.

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Why don't you just bring them both to God? He can handle what

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you're carrying. He handled Jeremiah's and he'll handle

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yours. Now, let's get back to Basil. Basil Scott spent decades

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in Asia pursuing reconciliation between the people who had every

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reason to stay on opposite sides of a wall.

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home, and he'd gone without knowing how it would unfold.

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Years later, reflecting on what God had asked of him, he said he

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didn't regret any of it. What God had asked of Basil looked

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like more than any person should reasonably give, but God was

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asking him to take the next step without the full picture first.

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Basil took it and the rest came after. I know this: God rarely

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shows the full picture before he asks you to take the first step.

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He showed Abraham one mountain. He gave Jeremiah one word at a

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time. He gave Basil one call and no map for what to expect of the

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rest of his life. He gave me a nudge toward a pulpit when I was

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convinced he had the wrong man. You see, the picture comes into

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focus as you walk. You rarely get it all at once. Here's

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today's challenge: If there's something God has been asking of

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you that feels like more than you have, don't suppress what

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you're feeling. Go ahead and tell him what's going on. Tell

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him you're worn out or you're scared and you think he might

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have the wrong person. Don't worry. He can handle all of that.

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Then ask him for one next step and then just take it. That's

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how Jeremiah kept going, how Abraham climbed the mountain

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without a plan and how Basil got on a plane back to the place

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that had almost killed him. Lord, you know the people today who

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are listening, who feel like God's asking them for more than

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they have. Meet them where Jeremiah was, worn out and still

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yours. Remind them that the fire and the bones is a sign of a

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calling and give them the courage to take the next step

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without the full picture. And let them trust that what you

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have asked is worth what it will cost. In Jesus' name, Amen. If

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this podcast has been an encouragement to you, would you

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take a minute and leave a rating and review? It helps more people

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find these devotions and it only takes a moment. I'd be so

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grateful. And thanks for joining me on Daily Devotions for Busy

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Lives. Remember, God rarely shows the full picture before he

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asks you to take the first step. The picture comes into focus as

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you walk. Come back next time for more encouragement to help

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you live grounded in God's truth. Until then, God bless and have a

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great day.