The Hobbit Who Did Not Know the Way
In J.R.R. Tolkien's The Fellowship of the Ring, the Council of Elrond gathers the wisest and mightiest figures in Middle-earth to decide the fate of the One Ring. Warriors argue. Kings deliberate. Wizards weigh strategies. And in the middle of all that power and wisdom, a small hobbit named Frodo stands and says quietly, "I will take the Ring, though I do not know the way."
That line has always struck me as one of the purest expressions of faith in all of literature. Frodo does not volunteer because he has a plan. He has no map for the journey ahead, no military training, no special strength. He simply knows the task must be done, and he is willing to take the next step without seeing the destination.
Faith works like that. It is not a feeling of certainty. It is not a detailed blueprint for the future. Faith is the willingness to say yes to God before you can see the road ahead. Abraham left Ur not knowing where he was going. Moses stood before Pharaoh with nothing but a staff and a word from the Almighty. The disciples dropped their nets before Jesus explained the plan.
You may be facing a calling today that feels too large for someone your size. Take heart. The Most High does not ask you to know the way. He asks you to take the step. He Himself is the Way.
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