Feeding on the Wind

This has been an unusual year here in El Paso. Dust storms are a normal part of life here, but the frequency and severity of them have taken me by surprise. 2025 is turning out to be the worst year for dust storms since the 1936 Dust Bowl.

We usually stay indoors when one of these storms comes through, but that’s not always an option.

Here’s one action that has not crossed my mind: I have not faced the wind and opened my mouth in hopes of receiving nourishment or refreshment.

But there was a time in history when God accused His people of doing something just as foolish. It’s found in the Book of Hosea:

The people of Israel feed on the wind;
    they chase after the east wind all day long.

-Hosea 12:1

Hosea exposed the betrayal of God’s people, comparing it to the behavior of an unfaithful spouse. This prophet teaches us that God takes sin seriously and personally.

Hosea challenged God’s people to turn from their idols and stop trusting in foreign alliances to save them. Tragically, they refused. They stubbornly insisted on doing things their way instead of doing things God’s way.

Hosea pointed out the futility of their continued disobedience: they might as well have tried to eat or capture the wind.

This is both tragic and foolish, but let’s be honest with ourselves: We’ve all disobeyed God and ended up with broken, empty hearts as a result. We’ve all been guilty of feeding on the wind.

I’m thankful that Hosea ends with an invitation. God’s people had acted treacherously, yet He invited them to turn back to Him and be healed (Hosea 14). Then and now, genuine repentance is the pathway to restoration.

Father, I ask your forgiveness for those times I’ve willfully disobeyed You. Forgive me for thinking something good could come from sinful choices. I ask for a heart that is quick to turn back to you whenever I stray.

You are a mist (James 4:14)

The Book of James includes this admonition:


13Come now, you who say, “Today or tomorrow we will go into such and such a town and spend a year there and trade and make a profit”— 14yet you do not know what tomorrow will bring. What is your life? For you are a mist that appears for a little time and then vanishes. 15Instead you ought to say, “If the Lord wills, we will live and do this or that.”

-James 4:13-15

James is not arguing against planning or even making profits. The Bible, in fact speaks of both of these activities in positive terms, so long as they are done honestly (Proverbs 6:6-8 comes to mind).

Instead, James is warning about a specific danger: planning as though God is not part of the equation.

James even gives us some practical reasons to avoid a presumptuous attitude about life in verse 14.

First, we see that life is unpredictable (“you do not know what tomorrow will bring”). We can and should do our best to plan wisely–God is not honored by a life that is lived irresponsibly or haphazardly.

But consider this: Some of the most significant events in your life will be things you never planned. 

The year 2012 was a prime example of this for me. I had moved from Manila to Angeles City with the sole intention of helping my friend plant a church. But God had even more in store for me. I ended up meeting my wife the day after I moved. We were married within weeks. One of the greatest earthly blessings a man can experience is that of finding a godly wife. This blessing came to me at a time and in a way I never would have expected.

But 2012 would end in heartbreak. I vividly remember receiving a text from the United States informing me that my mom would soon step into eternity. She was a Christian, so she was prepared. But I was devastated--her death meant she would never meet my wife in person. These verses in Job took on a new meaning:

20Then Job arose and tore his robe and shaved his head and fell on the ground and worshiped. 21And he said, “Naked I came from my mother’s womb, and naked shall I return. The Lord gave, and the Lord has taken away; blessed be the name of the Lord.”

-Job 1:20-21

You may have been through a season in life that is even more extreme than what I’ve shared. But one way or another, we all learn that life surprises us with both joy and pain. As I’ve argued before, God has a way of wrecking our plans.

We are also warned that life is fleeting. James describes it as a “mist” (vs. 14).

Here’s the irony: I don’t think one appreciates how quickly life goes by until it’s about halfway over. It takes at least a few decades to even begin to grasp it. It seems like we reach the end before we even begin to understand God’s goodness and wisdom.

Here’s a quote that has always resonated with me:


“Life is a short and fevered rehearsal for a concert we cannot stay to give. Just when we appear to have attained some proficiency we are forced to lay our instruments down.”

-AW Tozer

The “mist” analogy of verse 14 also warns us that life is temporary.

Put another way, life is a temporary assignment heading towards an eternal destination.

Every man, woman, boy and girl has an immortal soul. This temporal earthly life, biblically speaking, is preparation for eternity. The ending of biological life is only the beginning of something even more significant. Those who have trusted Christ will enjoy His presence for eternity. Those who have rejected Him will spend eternity regretting it.

We live in a reality of eternal consequence. It’s only fitting that we live with an eternal perspective.

Life is unpredictable. Life is fleeting. Life is temporary.

How should we live in light of these realities? The answer is in verse 15: “If the Lord wills, we will live and do this or that.”

The wisest path in life is to live in submission to the will of God. We submit to the One who knows and holds the future. We submit to the One who will maximize these few, fleeting years for His eternal purposes.

The first step in living this kind of life is to believe the gospel and trust Christ as your Lord and Savior.

Once you’ve trusted Christ, obey Him! This is the essence of submission–obedience. I can’t think of a single time that I have regretted obeying God and doing His will. Disobedience, on the other hand, has only left me with regrets–regrets for wasted time that was never mine to begin with.

Choose wisely. Live wisely.

Father, I thank you for your promise to give wisdom to those who genuinely seek it (James 1:5). I know that Your plan for me is one that will bring glory to You and joy to me. I pray that I will live wisely and obediently with an eternal perspective.

This book is included in my book entitled Knowing God’s Will: Discovering His Plan for Your Life.