Why Following Jesus Doesn’t Mean an Easy Life (And Why That’s Good News)
It’s a belief many people carry—sometimes without even realizing it:
If God loves me, life should be easy.
Things should work out.
Prayers should be answered quickly.
Doors should open smoothly.
But Jesus tells us something very different.
In John 16:33, He says:
“In this world you will have trouble.”
Not might. Not if.
Will.
The Myth of an Easy Faith
Somewhere along the way, many of us adopted a version of faith that looks more like comfort than commitment.
We expect:
fewer problems
less pressure
smoother outcomes
But Jesus never promised a trouble-free life.
Instead, He promised something better:
His presence in the middle of it.
What Pressure Actually Means
When life gets hard, it’s easy to assume:
God is distant
God is disappointed
God is absent
But pressure is not proof of God’s absence.
In Scripture, pressure is often where God does His deepest work.
Like olives pressed into oil.
Like grapes crushed into wine.
The pressure produces something.
The Fire Reveals and Refines
In Daniel 3, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego stood firm in their faith—and it led them directly into the fire.
Not away from it.
Into it.
But what happened next changes everything.
They were not alone.
There was a fourth man in the fire.
And not only were they unharmed—but what had bound them was burned away.
The fire didn’t destroy them.
It freed them.
Nothing Is Wasted
The myth says:
“If I’m doing the right thing, life should get easier.”
The truth is:
God uses everything.
Every challenge
Every delay
Every disappointment
To shape something deeper in you.
To refine your faith.
To strengthen your trust.
To prepare you for what’s next.
God Is With You In It
Jesus didn’t just say we would face trouble.
He also said:
“Take heart. I have overcome the world.”
The pressure is real.
But it doesn’t have the final word.
Because Jesus already does.
Final Thought
What if the very thing you’re asking God to remove…
is the thing He’s using to prepare you?
You’re not alone in it.
There is a fourth man in the fire.
And nothing you’re walking through is wasted in Him.
Why do you think many people expect life to be easier when they follow Jesus?
How does John 16:33 challenge your expectations about faith?
Can you think of a time where a difficult season produced something good in your life?
What does it mean that God is “with us in the fire,” not just after it?
What might God be shaping or refining in your life right now?