Divine Disruption
“In the sixth month of Elizabeth’s
pregnancy, God sent the angel Gabriel to Nazareth, a village in Galilee, to
a virgin named Mary. She was engaged to be married to a man named Joseph, a
descendant of King David. Gabriel appeared to her and said, “Greetings, favored
woman! The Lord is with you! Confused and disturbed, Mary
tried to think what the angel could mean.” – Luke 1:26-29
Every major
move of God begins with a disruption. It is a spiritual pattern woven
throughout Scripture and echoed in the lives of countless believers. When God
is preparing to shift something significant—whether in a person, a family, a
community, or even the world—He often begins by unsettling what feels stable,
predictable, or familiar. We build routines and expectations that make us feel
secure, but God’s greatest works rarely fit inside the boundaries of our
comfort.
Divine
disruptions rarely arrive with warning. They don’t knock politely or wait for a
convenient moment. They break in—sudden, disorienting, and often deeply
unsettling. Luke’s account of Gabriel’s visit to Mary captures this with
striking honesty. The angel’s appearance did not immediately fill Mary with
peace or clarity. Instead, Scripture emphasizes her confusion and disturbance.
Those two words alone dismantle the myth that genuine faith always feels calm
or certain.
Ordinary
Meets Extraordinary
Mary was a
young woman living a simple, unfolding life. She was engaged, preparing for
marriage, and likely imagining a future that looked ordinary and stable. Her
dreams probably mirrored the dreams of many young women in her culture: a home,
a family, a steady rhythm of life. Everything made sense. Everything was on
track. Everything felt normal.
Then God stepped in with a plan that was anything but ordinary. His calling did not align with her expectations, her timeline, or her sense of preparedness. The angel’s announcement didn’t simply adjust her plans—it shattered the framework she assumed her life would follow. God interrupted her simplicity with a calling that was divine, disruptive, and completely beyond anything she could have anticipated.
This wasn’t
a minor shift. It was a total reorientation. God wasn’t asking Mary to tweak
her schedule or make a small adjustment. He was inviting her into a story that
would change the world. And Mary wasn’t praying for this. She wasn’t planning
for this. She wasn’t positioned for this. Nothing about her circumstances
suggested she was ready to carry the Messiah. Nothing about her life hinted
that she was qualified for such a holy assignment.
God’s timing felt abrupt. God’s plan felt overwhelming. God’s purpose felt impossible. And yet—this is how God often works. He calls ordinary people into extraordinary purposes long before they feel ready. He doesn’t wait for people to be “ready”. Instead, He provides strength, wisdom, and courage along the way. The calling comes first, and the journey of obedience shapes the person into readiness.
Unqualified,
Unprepared, Yet Chosen
We sometimes imagine biblical characters as fearless and unshakable, but Mary’s initial response was deeply human. Scripture says she was troubled, perplexed, and unsure of what the greeting even meant. She didn’t immediately shout, “Yes, Lord!” She didn’t instantly understand the plan. She didn’t pretend to be unfazed. Her confusion wasn’t a sign of weak faith—it was the natural response of someone whose world had just been turned upside down.
The beauty
of the story is that God met her in that confusion. He didn’t rebuke her for
asking questions. He didn’t shame her for feeling overwhelmed. He didn’t demand
instant certainty. Instead, He offered reassurance. He offered clarity. He
offered His presence. And in that sacred space—between confusion and
calling—Mary found the courage to say yes.
Faith is
activated when comfort is interrupted. If everything is predictable, faith
isn’t required. If everything is controllable, trust isn’t necessary. God’s
greatest works often begin with a moment that forces us to lean on Him in ways
we never have before. When God is preparing to do something significant, He
often starts by unsettling what is too small, too safe, or too familiar.
Discomfort is not the enemy—it is often the doorway.
Disruption unsettles Comfort
Disruption
shakes loose the things we cling to so God can place something better in our
hands. Sometimes we don’t realize how stuck we are until God interrupts the
pattern. Divine disruption exposes unhealthy attachments, limiting beliefs,
hidden idols, stagnant faith, and misplaced priorities. It brings to the
surface what God wants to heal, refine, or redirect. Disruption is often the
clearing before the blessing, the shaking before the shifting, the interruption
before the increase.
Human beings
are architects of predictability. We love rhythm, structure, and the sense of
control that comes from knowing what tomorrow should look like. Our routines
become our safety nets. Our expectations become our anchors. Our plans become
our comfort. But comfort can quietly become confinement. When God wants to grow
us, stretch us, or move us, He rarely does it in the realm of the familiar.
Comfort is
predictable. Comfort is safe. Comfort is manageable. But comfort is also
limiting. God’s most extraordinary movements—whether in Scripture or in our own
lives—almost always begin where our comfort ends. We design lives that feel
manageable; God designs lives that become meaningful.
The
miraculous almost always happens outside the borders of what feels manageable.
Miracles rarely unfold in the places we control; they unfold in the places
where we must trust. They unfold in the places where, like Mary, we say, “Let
it be to me according to your word” (Luke 1:38). Scripture consistently shows
that God calls people into places they would never choose on their own.
Disruptions
Are Doorways to Destiny
Mary’s life
was interrupted not to derail her but to draw her into a story far greater than
the one she had imagined. Divine disruptions often function the same way. They
shift our trajectory so God can align us with His purposes. What feels like a
detour may actually be the doorway to destiny.
Mary’s yes
didn’t remove the confusion, but it transformed her life. She moved from
disturbance to surrender, from uncertainty to participation in God’s redemptive
work. Divine disruptions do the same in us—they stretch our faith, reshape our
identity, and deepen our dependence on God.
Divine disruptions are often the birthplace of God’s greatest work. They remind us that God’s plans may surprise us, but they never harm us. They may disturb our comfort, but they always lead us toward purpose.
Mary’s story invites us to hold space for both confusion and faith, to acknowledge our humanity while trusting God’s sovereignty. And like Mary, we may one day look back and realize that the disruption we feared was actually the beginning of God’s most beautiful work in our lives.

Being uncomfortable and God coming in to disrupt our comfortability is a blessing in disguise.
ReplyDeleteWhether we accept it or not , it's god's way or our way.
God does not want us to stay where we are.He wants to stretch us and grow us up.
People stay stuck because they fear, the other do not believe in god or they do not believe what God can do.
I don't want to be a creature of habit.I wanna trust god fully for the next move of uncomfortableness.
I believe with his uncomfortable.There is god's blessings and we need to step in faith into our blessings.