Why Did Jesus Tell Us to Stay Awake? The Answer May Surprise You

You pray, you attend church, you go through the spiritual routines. But are you truly awake? In a world drowning in distractions and numbed by endless routine, Jesus issues a call that cuts through our comfortable slumber: Keep awake. Not with anxious fear, but with joyful expectation. Because the Lord you are waiting for is already here, moving in the margins of your ordinary day, waiting to be recognised.

Daily Biblical Reflection

Verse for Today (8th February 2026)

“Keep awake, therefore, for you do not know on what day your Lord is coming.”

Matthew 24:42

These reflections were inspired by the Verse for Today (8th February 2026) shared this morning by His Excellency, Rt. Rev. Dr. Selvister Ponnumuthan.

Reflection: The Gift of Holy Vigilance

In these words from the Gospel of Matthew, our Lord issues not a warning meant to frighten, but an invitation meant to awaken. “Keep awake,” He tells us, with the tender insistence of one who knows that our greatest danger lies not in active rebellion, but in the slow drift of spiritual drowsiness.

What does it mean to keep awake in our daily lives? It is far more than merely avoiding sleep. To keep awake is to live with eyes wide open to the presence of God in every ordinary moment. It is to recognise that the sacred breaks through not only in grand visions and miraculous signs, but in the quiet whisper of conscience, in the face of a neighbour in need, in the unexpected opportunity to show mercy.

Jesus speaks of uncertainty regarding the day of His coming, and there is profound wisdom in this divine mystery. If we knew the exact hour, we might live carelessly until the final moment, cramming our repentance and devotion into a last desperate rush. But because we do not know, we are invited to live each day as if it might be our last encounter with grace, our final opportunity to love as we have been loved.

This holy vigilance is not anxious or fearful. Rather, it is the watchfulness of a bride awaiting her beloved, of a servant eager to welcome the master home, of a child listening for a parent’s footsteps. It is vigilance rooted in love, not dread. We stay awake not because we fear judgment, but because we long for union with the One who is our heart’s deepest desire.

Consider how often we sleepwalk through our days, our minds occupied with endless distractions, our hearts numbed by routine. We can sit through prayers without truly praying, attend liturgy without truly worshipping, and pass by those who need us without truly seeing. This is the sleep Christ warns against, the slumber of the soul that misses the kairos moments when heaven touches earth.

The Lord’s coming is not merely a distant future event. He comes to us now, in this present moment, in countless forms. He comes in the person begging at the roadside, in the difficult conversation we have been avoiding, in the small voice within that calls us to greater holiness. He comes in the breaking of bread, in the gathering of believers, in the silence of prayer. Will we be awake to recognise Him?

Keeping awake requires intentionality. It means establishing rhythms of prayer that anchor our days in God’s presence. It means practising the discipline of gratitude, which opens our eyes to the extraordinary grace hidden in ordinary moments. It means choosing to engage with Scripture not as an ancient text but as the living Word that speaks directly to our circumstances today.

This vigilance also calls us to examine our lives honestly. Are there areas where we have grown complacent? Relationships we have neglected? Virtues we have stopped cultivating? Sins we have learned to tolerate? To keep awake is to refuse the comfortable numbness that accepts mediocrity in our spiritual lives.

Yet we must remember that this wakefulness is sustained not by our own strength alone, but by the grace of the Holy Spirit. We are not called to an exhausting, anxious, hyper-vigilant state that never rests. Rather, we are invited into a restful alertness, grounded in trust, where even our sleep becomes prayer and our waking is continuous communion with God.

Today, as we reflect on Christ’s words, let us ask ourselves: Am I truly awake to the presence of God in my life? Am I attentive to the movements of grace? Am I ready, not with fearful preparation, but with joyful anticipation, for the Lord who comes to meet me in expected and unexpected ways?

May we embrace this call to vigilance with renewed commitment. Let us shake off the drowsiness of spiritual complacency and live each moment with the awareness that we stand always in the presence of the Holy One. For in staying awake, we discover that life itself becomes prayer, and every breath an act of worship.

The Lord is coming. Indeed, He is already here. May we have eyes to see, ears to hear, and hearts awake to receive Him.

Keep Awake: 

Living Ready in an Uncertain World

“Keep awake, therefore, for you do not know on what day your Lord is coming.”

— Matthew 24:42

Jesus speaks these words near the end of His earthly ministry, seated with His disciples on the Mount of Olives, looking across at the magnificent temple in Jerusalem. What begins as admiration of stone and structure quickly turns into a sobering prophecy: nothing that seems permanent will remain untouched.

This moment unfolds within what we now call the Olivet Discourse—Jesus’ most extended teaching on judgment, suffering, endurance, and hope. It is not a discourse meant to satisfy curiosity about the future, but one designed to shape how believers live in the present.

Not a Calendar, but a Call

When Jesus urges His disciples to “keep awake,” He is not asking them to scan the skies or decode timelines. He is calling them—and us—to a posture of spiritual attentiveness.

The uncertainty of timing is intentional. If the day were known, vigilance would fade into complacency. Instead, Jesus removes certainty so that faith, faithfulness, and love may remain alive every day.

To stay awake, in the biblical sense, is:

👉 to resist spiritual numbness

👉 to refuse distraction by fear or comfort

👉 to live with integrity when no one is watching

👉 to love generously, forgive freely, and serve faithfully

A World That Lulls Us to Sleep

The signs Jesus describes—wars, deception, suffering, betrayal—are not meant to terrify believers but to prepare them. They describe a world that constantly tries to lull God’s people into either panic or apathy.

Some fall asleep through fear, overwhelmed by chaos.

Others drift off through comfort, distracted by routine and success.

Jesus warns against both.

Staying awake means holding hope and realism together: acknowledging brokenness without surrendering trust, enduring hardship without losing compassion.

Readiness Is a Way of Life

In the parables that follow—faithful servants, wise virgins, entrusted talents—Jesus repeatedly shifts the focus from when He will come to how His followers live until He does.

Readiness is not about perfection.

It is about faithful presence.

It looks like:

❗️ doing today’s duty with love

❗️ remaining faithful in small, unseen choices

❗️ keeping lamps trimmed through prayer, humility, and mercy

❗️ living as though every day matters eternally

Awake with Hope

The command to “keep awake” is not a threat.

It is an invitation.

An invitation to live awake to God’s presence, awake to the needs of others, awake to the reality that history is moving—not randomly, but purposefully—toward Christ.

Christ will return.

Justice will be done.

Hope will be fulfilled.

Until then, we stay awake—not anxious, not fearful—but faithful.

Today’s Takeaway

Spiritual wakefulness is not about knowing the future.

It is about living fully present to God today.

Stay awake.

Stay faithful.

Stay ready.

Blog Details

Category: Wake-Up Calls

Scripture Focus: Matthew 24:42

Reflection Number: 39th Wake-Up Call of 2026

Copyright: © 2026 Rise&Inspire

Tagline: Reflections that grow with time

Website: Home | Blog | About Us | Contact| Resources

Word Count:1373

📖 Why Do Birds Know God’s Timing Better Than We Do?

(Jeremiah 8:7 Explained)

God once used birds to shame His people. Not because the birds were smarter, but because they were more obedient. They knew their seasons. They responded to the pull of divine order without hesitation. Meanwhile, humanity—the crown of creation, made in God’s image—stumbles through life spiritually disoriented and distracted. If a swallow knows when to return home, why don’t we? Jeremiah 8:7 asks a question we’re still dodging today.

Daily Biblical Reflection – Verse for Today (26th November 2025)

Forwarded every morning by His Excellency, Rt. Rev. Dr. Selvister Ponnumuthan, upon whom Johnbritto Kurusumuthu wrote reflections.

Even the stork in the heavens knows its times, and the turtledove, swallow, and crane observe the time of their coming, but my people do not know the ordinance of the Lord.”— Jeremiah 8:7

The Weight of Divine Observation

There is something deeply humbling about the prophet Jeremiah’s words. God, speaking through His servant, draws our attention to the instinctive wisdom of creation. The stork knows when to migrate. The turtledove, the swallow, the crane, each follows the rhythm written into its very being by the Creator. They possess no theological education, no liturgy, no calendar of holy days, yet they move in perfect harmony with God’s appointed timing.

And then comes the contrast: “but my people do not know the ordinance of the Lord.” This is more than ignorance, it is a divine lament. Those made in His image, gifted with revelation, have drifted further from His voice than even the simplest creatures.

The Rhythm of God’s Will

To know the ordinances of the Lord is to recognise His timing, to discern His movements, and to align with His purpose. Birds respond to the instinct that God placed within them. We, however, often resist the quiet tug of the Spirit. We miss seasons of grace. We ignore warnings. We delay obedience.

The issue is rarely a lack of knowledge. More often, it is a lack of surrender.

A Call to Spiritual Attentiveness

We live in a world drowning in noise yet starving for meaning. In distraction, we lose the ability to sense God’s timeliness. He invites us instead to attentiveness—to prayer, to Scripture, to quiet listening. This is how we recover spiritual rhythm.

What would it look like to follow God with the same effortless obedience as migrating birds, responding not from pressure but from alignment with how we were created to live?

Learning from Creation’s Obedience

Birds do not negotiate with the seasons. They do not ask whether migration is convenient. They simply obey. Their existence exposes our struggle: not with knowing, but with yielding. We know love over hate, humility over pride, and repentance over stubbornness. Yet we hesitate.

Creation obeys. Humanity debates.

A Time for Returning

Jeremiah’s rebuke carried both warning and invitation. God exposed the disconnect not to shame His people but to call them back. Today, the invitation stands. We can return. We can awaken. We can realign.

Prayer

Lord, forgive us when creation obeys more readily than we do. Teach us to hear Your voice, recognise Your timing, and respond without resistance. Make obedience natural, joyful, and immediate. Help us move in harmony with Your Spirit in every season. In Jesus’ name, Amen.

Final Reflection Paragraph 

Birds appear throughout Scripture not as background details but as purposeful symbols woven into God’s unfolding revelation. From the dove of Noah offering hope after judgment, to the ravens feeding Elijah, to Jesus’ reminder that no sparrow falls without the Father’s notice, birds teach obedience, trust, humility, sacrifice, divine provision, judgment, and the presence of the Spirit. They remind us that creation listens, responds, and fulfils its purpose. If even the flight of a swallow reflects the wisdom of its Maker, then how much more should we, who bear God’s image, learn to live in rhythm with His will.

May this reflection draw you closer to the heart of God today, and may you move through this day with the grace and attentiveness that mark those who truly know the ordinances of the Lord.

Check the Rise & Inspire “Wake-Up Calls” archive at riseandinspire.co.in

© 2025 Johnbritto Kurusumuthu | Rise & Inspire Devotional Series

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