Wednesday, 15 April 2026

When Heaven Interrupts Earth Fresh Manna by Pastor Tim Burt

Fresh Manna with Pastor Tim Burt 
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Greetings and thank you for reading. I pray that Fresh Manna is a blessing to you and helps you launch your day in the Lord. If you are blessed by what you read, please share it with a friend. There is a link in this box and  at the bottom of each devotional that says:  "Forward this email to a friend." Click on it, and put in their email and it will go to them. Thanks in advance for sharing! God bless you and thanks again for reading! Forward this email to a friend


When Heaven Interrupts Earth

April 15, 2026

We sometimes read the Gospels as if they belong to a sealed-off era—when heaven was unusually active and earth unusually receptive. Angels appeared. Voices spoke. Miracles unfolded. Lives were interrupted by God in unmistakable ways. But that quiet assumption can lead us somewhere dangerous: the idea that heaven used to interrupt earth, but no longer does.

During Jesus’ earthly ministry, the land was filled with supernatural encounters. Zechariah in the temple. Mary receiving impossible news. Shepherds encountering angels. Wise men following a star they could not fully explain. Simeon and Anna recognizing eternity wrapped in infant skin.

Then Jesus began to walk among them, and interruptions multiplied. Fishermen experienced full nets. A Samaritan woman met a Man who knew everything about her and still offered living water. Blind eyes opened. Hardened hearts softened. Tombs gave up their dead. Heaven kept interrupting Earth.

But those interruptions did not end with the resurrection. The book of Acts shows us that clearly. Saul encountered Jesus on the road to Damascus. Peter received direction through a vision. Stephen saw heaven opened and Jesus standing at the right hand of God. And that pattern has continued quietly for two thousand years. The earth today is still filled with people who can point to moments in their lives that cannot be explained by circumstances alone. Not always angels. Not always audible voices. Often, it is quieter than that.

It may be the sudden conviction you feel while reading Scripture, realizing God is addressing your exact situation. It may be a sermon that answers the prayer you prayed the night before. It may be a conversation in which someone unknowingly speaks the very words your heart needed. It may be a closed door that later proves to be protection. It may be a deep unrest in your spirit that won’t let you continue down a certain path, or a strange courage rising within you to do what you once feared.

If you look back over your own life, you can likely see these interruptions. A job you didn’t get that later spared you regret. A relationship that ended before it caused deeper damage. A prompting to call someone, only to discover they were in crisis at that very hour. A Scripture that would not leave you alone. A burden that grew until you obeyed. Those are not coincidences. Those are moments when heaven quietly touched earth.

God still works supernaturally, but often through circumstances that require spiritual attentiveness to recognize. The Shepherd still speaks. The Spirit still prompts. The Father still arranges details with wisdom beyond our sight. The question is not whether heaven interrupts earth. The question is whether we are listening when it does. Are we moving too fast to notice? Too distracted to hear? Too skeptical to believe? Too busy to respond?

John 10:27 (NKJV) — “My sheep hear My voice, and I know them, and they follow Me.”

He still speaks. He still knows. He still leads. Sometimes, the most supernatural thing that will happen in your life today will not be a visible miracle, but a quiet direction you choose to obey. Heaven is not silent. The only question is whether we are paying attention.

Isaiah‬ ‭50‬:‭4‬ ‭NLT‬‬ “The Sovereign Lord has given me his words of wisdom, so that I know how to comfort the weary. Morning by morning he wakens me and opens my understanding to His will.”

Prayer: Dear Lord, Thank You that You still speak and still guide Your people. Forgive us for the times we rush past Your interruptions. Slow us down. Tune our ears. Make us sensitive to Your Spirit in the ordinary rhythms of our lives. Give us courage to follow when You nudge, convict, redirect, or comfort. We want to hear You and respond in faith. In Jesus’ name, Amen.


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Sunday, 12 April 2026

Endurance, Us, and the Plan of God Fresh Manna by Pastor Tim Burt

Fresh Manna with Pastor Tim Burt 
Tim Logo   A Note from Pastor Tim
Greetings and thank you for reading. I pray that Fresh Manna is a blessing to you and helps you launch your day in the Lord. If you are blessed by what you read, please share it with a friend. There is a link in this box and  at the bottom of each devotional that says:  "Forward this email to a friend." Click on it, and put in their email and it will go to them. Thanks in advance for sharing! God bless you and thanks again for reading! Forward this email to a friend


Endurance, Us, and the Plan of God  

April 13, 2026
by Timothy Burt

There are seasons in life when you know God has spoken something to your heart—but everything happening around you seems to say the opposite. That’s where endurance is born.

Joseph knew what that felt like. As a young man, God gave him a dream—clear, powerful, unmistakable. God was going to use his life in a great way. But almost immediately, everything went wrong. He was betrayed by his own brothers, sold into slavery, falsely accused, thrown into prison, and forgotten by the people he helped.

At every stage, Joseph could have said, “This isn’t what God showed me. This must not be God.” And that’s exactly where most people quit—not because they stop believing in God, but because they stop believing what God said.

But Joseph didn’t do that.

Somewhere deep in his heart, he held onto that dream—not as wishful thinking, but as something God had spoken. And even when his life looked like the opposite of that promise, he chose to endure.

Genesis 39:21 (NKJV) “But the Lord was with Joseph and showed him mercy, and He gave him favor in the sight of the keeper of the prison.”

God was with him in the pit, in slavery, and in prison.

And here’s what’s easy to miss: Joseph didn’t just wait—he stayed faithful. He served, honored God, and gave his best in places that didn’t look anything like the dream.

That’s real endurance.

Endurance isn’t dramatic. It’s quiet. It’s choosing to trust God when nothing is moving. It’s staying faithful when no one sees. It’s continuing when quitting would feel completely justified.

There was no point in Joseph’s journey where he could see how it would all come together—not one.

But God could.

God wasn’t just taking Joseph somewhere—He was forming him into someone who could be trusted with influence, responsibility, and the lives of others.

Hebrews 10:36 (NKJV) “For you have need of endurance, so that after you have done the will of God, you may receive the promise.”

That means doing the will of God doesn’t always bring immediate results. Sometimes, it leads you into a season where endurance is required before the promise ever shows up.

Joseph lived that.

And when the moment finally came—when he stood before Pharaoh—it wasn’t luck or timing. It was the result of years of unseen faithfulness.

What looked like delay was actually preparation. What felt like loss was actually shaping. What seemed like injustice was not the end of the story.

And when Joseph looked back, he finally understood.

Genesis 50:20 (NKJV) “But as for you, you meant evil against me; but God meant it for good… to save many people alive.”

Joseph’s endurance wasn’t just about his life—it was about the lives connected to his obedience.

And the same is true for you.

You may not understand what God is doing right now. You may feel like things are off course, delayed, or even broken. But if God has spoken to your heart, don’t reinterpret His promise based on your circumstances.

Hold on. Stay faithful. Endure.

Because God is working in ways you cannot see—and there is more connected to your obedience than you realize.

Romans 8:25 (NKJV) “But if we hope for what we do not see, we eagerly wait for it with perseverance.”

Prayer: Dear Lord, help me to trust You when life doesn’t make sense. Strengthen my heart to endure when I cannot see what You are doing. Remind me of what You have spoken, and keep me from letting circumstances rewrite Your promises. Teach me to be faithful in every season, knowing You are working all things together for good. Help me not to quit, but to stand firm, trust deeply, and follow You fully—no matter what it looks like today. In Jesus’ name, Amen!


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The “Full-Time Job” Is Dying

Friday, 10 April 2026

Running on Empty: An Inspirational Story Fresh Manna by Pastor Tim Burt

Fresh Manna with Pastor Tim Burt 
Tim Logo   A Note from Pastor Tim
Greetings and thank you for reading. I pray that Fresh Manna is a blessing to you and helps you launch your day in the Lord. If you are blessed by what you read, please share it with a friend. There is a link in this box and  at the bottom of each devotional that says:  "Forward this email to a friend." Click on it, and put in their email and it will go to them. Thanks in advance for sharing! God bless you and thanks again for reading! Forward this email to a friend


Running on Empty: An Inspirational Story

April 10. 2026
by Timothy Burt

Though this happened to me in my 20s, it still comes to mind as an advantage because I have sworn it will never happen again.

It happened on a morning when I thought I was too busy to stop. I had places to be and a list in my head that was already longer than the day. As I backed out of the driveway, the gas light flashed on. I saw it… acknowledged it… and then convinced myself, “I’ll fill up later.” Later never came.

A few miles down the road, the engine sputtered. Not a polite reminder—but a firm declaration that my “I’ll-be-fine” mindset had caught up with me. Within seconds the car shut down, and I rolled to the shoulder with nothing but momentum and frustration.

As I sat there, I couldn’t help but think of Jesus’ parable the Pastor preached on Sunday:

"Then the Kingdom of Heaven will be like ten bridesmaids who took their lamps and went to meet the bridegroom… The five who were foolish didn’t take enough olive oil for their lamps.” — Matthew 25:1–3 (NLT)

For the first time, that parable felt personal. Those foolish bridesmaids weren’t unbelievers. They weren’t mocking or careless. They knew the bridegroom. They were waiting for Him. They had lamps. They had oil to start with.

Their mistake wasn't unbelief—it was under-preparation. They assumed what they had would be enough. They thought they could refill later. They didn’t expect the delay.

And sitting there in my immobilized car, I realized: I had done the exact same thing spiritually many times.

Many Christians know Jesus and understand salvation, but their spiritual lives gradually run dry because they don’t stay close to Him day after day. They skip time in the Word. They postpone prayer. They drift from church. They succumb to fellowship with those that  don't believe in the Lord and once again participate in negative activities that pull them even further from God. They try to rely on yesterday’s spiritual moments to fuel today’s battles. And when difficulty or darkness hits, their spiritual tank is empty—and the enemy pounces on the opportunity.

It’s not that they don’t love Jesus. It’s that they didn’t stay filled.

As I waited for roadside help, the Lord gently impressed something on my heart:
“This is what happens when you try to run on yesterday’s fuel.  Of course don't do this with your car, but more importantly, don't let it happen in your spiritual life. Spend time with me in my word and in prayer. Stay filled!”

Eventually, help arrived. The man poured enough gas into my tank to get me moving again. And as I drove to the nearest station, I couldn’t help but smile at the grace of God. He does the same for our hearts—meeting us in our emptiness, restoring us, and calling us back to a daily walk with Him.

The wise bridesmaids were ready because they valued preparation. They stayed supplied. They lived expecting the bridegroom.

We can do the same. Don’t let your spiritual life run on fumes. Don’t wait for a crisis to discover you needed more oil. Take time today to fill your heart with Jesus—in His Word, in prayer, and in His church.

"Be dressed for service and keep your lamps burning.” — Luke 12:35 (NLT)

Prayer: Lord Jesus, help me stay spiritually full and close to You each day. Don’t let me drift or run on empty. Fill me with fresh oil through Your Word, prayer, worship, and the fellowship of believers. Keep my lamp burning brightly for You. In Jesus’ name, Amen! ,


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In His love,
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When Heaven Interrupts Earth Fresh Manna by Pastor Tim Burt

Fresh Manna with Pastor Tim Burt  ...