
Click here for an audio version of this blog post.
These devotions are part of the Follow the Word Bible reading program at St. John Lutheran Church in Cypress, Texas. This year we are reading through the Scriptures together, listening for how God speaks through his Word day by day. I hope you will join me on this journey.
Today’s readings are 1 Chronicles 3-5, Psalm 118.
1 Chronicles 4:9-10
Jabez was more honorable than his brothers; and his mother called his name Jabez, saying, “Because I bore him in pain.” 10 Jabez called upon the God of Israel, saying, “Oh that you would bless me and enlarge my border, and that your hand might be with me, and that you would keep me from harm so that it might not bring me pain!” And God granted what he asked.

A brief mention in 1 Chronicles once captured the imagination of many. The prayer of Jabez became, for a time, something like a daily practice – a few words repeated with the hope that God would expand our influence and increase our blessing. It was simple, memorable, and appealing. But it also raised a question: Are we being invited into a posture of faith – or given a formula for results?
The prayer itself is faithful. Asking for God’s blessing, presence, and protection is a good thing. But Scripture presents Jabez’ prayer as a description, not a prescription. The danger is subtle: prayer can become a technique for securing outcomes, rather than a response of faith that rests in God’s gracious will. Jabez’s story is best received not as a method to replicate, but as a reminder that the Lord hears and answers according to his purposes – often in ways that go beyond what we ask or expect.
That tension shows up elsewhere in Scripture. In Genesis 48, Jacob adopts Ephraim and Manasseh – not as a sentimental gesture, but as a decisive act that reshapes the future of Israel. With Reuben’s failure, the birthright is not lost but redirected (alluded to in our reading from 1 Chronicles 5). Joseph receives a double portion through his sons. And yet even here, expectations are overturned as the younger is set before the older. Once again, God’s purposes move forward – not by natural order, not by human expectation, but by his gracious choosing.
That is what makes the prayer of Jabez so easy to misunderstand. We can be tempted to believe that there might be a way – a set of words, a pattern of prayer – that ensures a certain outcome. But the story of Scripture points us in a different direction. As the 1 Samuel video pointed out in the incident of the stolen Ark of the Covenant, God is not a trophy.” God is not managed by our methods. He is to be trusted as our loving Father in heaven.
The good news is not that we have found the right prayer to unlock blessing, but that God has blessed us in the heavenly places with every spiritual blessing in Jesus (Ephesians 1:3). God himself has drawn near in Jesus. In him, we are already blessed beyond measure – not according to a formula, but according to his amazingly abundant grace. And so we pray, not to secure a future of our own making, but to receive what he is pleased to give – trusting that his purposes, however surprising, are always good.
Click on the graphic below to watch the Bible Project video summary of the book of 1 Chronicles (we’ll get to 2 Samuel later this May in our reading program).









