What if the God who holds galaxies in His hands is personally mindful of you right now, in this very moment, with every detail of your life? What if His track record of faithfulness in your past is actually the guarantee of His blessing in your future? Psalm 115:12 is not just ancient poetry. It is a declaration that changes everything about how you face today.
I’ve written this biblical reflection for you on Psalm 115:12 with pastoral warmth and spiritual depth. This reflection:
– Explores the structure and meaning of the verse, moving from God’s past faithfulness to His future promises
– Includes personal application and encouragement for readers
– Connects to the “wake-up call” theme appropriate for the 12th day
This reflection emphasises God’s active remembrance and faithful blessing, offering hope and assurance to readers as they begin their day.
Daily Biblical Reflection
Verse for Today (12th January 2026)
The Verse for Today (12th January 2026) was forwarded to me this morning by His Excellency, Rt. Rev. Dr. Selvister Ponnumuthan, and it inspired me to write my reflections.
“The Lord has been mindful of us; he will bless us.”
Psalms 115:12
Today the 12th day of 2026
This is the 12th reflection on Rise&Inspire in 2026 under the category/series: Wake-up calls
Reflection
Dear friends in Christ,
As we begin this new day, the 12th of January 2026, we are met with a deep assurance that speaks directly to the human heart: “The Lord has been mindful of us; he will bless us.” These words from Psalm 115 are not merely poetic expressions but declarations of divine faithfulness that have sustained God’s people through every generation.
Notice the beautiful structure of this verse. It moves from remembrance to promise, from the past to the future, from what God has already done to what God will surely do. The psalmist begins with acknowledgment: “The Lord has been mindful of us.” This is not speculation or wishful thinking. It is testimony born from lived experience. When we consider to look back over our lives, over the days and months and years that have brought us to this moment, can we not trace the fingerprints of God’s mindfulness? In the provision that came just when we needed it, in the strength that carried us through impossible circumstances, in the comfort that found us in our darkest hours, God has been mindful.
The Hebrew word translated as “mindful” carries the sense of remembering with action. God’s mindfulness is never passive. When God remembers us, heaven moves on our behalf. Think of how God remembered Noah in the ark, how God remembered Hannah in her barrenness, how God remembered His covenant with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Divine mindfulness always leads to divine intervention.
But the verse does not stop with the past. It presses forward with confidence: “he will bless us.” The blessing is not uncertain or conditional on our performance. It flows naturally from God’s character. Because God has been faithful yesterday, we can trust that God will be faithful tomorrow. The God who was mindful remains mindful. The God who blessed continues to bless.
This is our wake-up call on this 12th day of the year. Perhaps you have awakened with burdens heavy on your shoulders. Perhaps anxiety about the future has robbed you of peace. Perhaps you feel forgotten or overlooked in the midst of life’s chaos. This verse comes as balm to the weary soul: You are not forgotten. The Lord has been mindful of you, and the Lord will bless you.
The blessing of God is not always what we expect or what we would choose for ourselves. Sometimes God’s blessing comes as strength in suffering rather than removal of suffering. Sometimes it comes as peace in the storm rather than calming of the storm. Sometimes it comes as grace to endure rather than immediate deliverance. But make no mistake, when God blesses, heaven touches earth, and nothing remains the same.
As we move through this day, let us walk in the confidence that we are not alone, not abandoned, not forgotten. The Creator of the universe is mindful of you, yes you, with all your struggles and dreams and fears and hopes. And because He has been mindful, because He has proven His faithfulness time and time again, we can face today and tomorrow with unshakeable assurance: He will bless us.
May this truth anchor your soul today. May it give you courage when courage fails. May it give you hope when hope seems distant. May it remind you that you belong to a God who sees you, knows you, remembers you, and blesses you.
Let us rise and let us inspire one another with this good news: The Lord has been mindful of us; He will bless us.
Amen.
Is the Blessing Conditional or Guaranteed?
Psalm 115:12 answers this question with quiet confidence rather than tension:
“The LORD has been mindful of us; he will bless us.”
The language of the verse is unmistakably assuring. It does not speculate or plead; it declares. The repeated promise — “he will bless… he will bless…” — flows directly from a settled truth: God has already been mindful. The psalmist anchors future hope in past faithfulness. Because the Lord has remembered His people before, He will not cease to care for them now.
Yet this assurance is not detached from relationship. The surrounding verses (9–11) call Israel, the house of Aaron, and all who fear the LORD to trust in Him. Verse 13 broadens the promise to all who fear the LORD, both small and great. This shows that the blessing is not a reward for flawless obedience, but the natural outflow of a covenant relationship marked by reverence, trust, and dependence on God.
In other words, the blessing is guaranteed, but not mechanical. It is not earned by performance, nor withdrawn at every human failure. It rests on God’s unchanging character and covenant loyalty. Those who look to Him, fear Him, and trust Him find that His mindfulness becomes blessing in action.
This understanding is beautifully echoed by Matthew Henry, who sees Psalm 115:12 as a turning point of encouragement. He notes that God’s mindfulness is not passive remembrance but active, thoughtful care — care that has already proven reliable in history and personal experience. From this lived reality, Henry confidently infers the promise: “He will bless us.” For Henry, God’s blessing is not merely spoken goodwill but doing well for His people — sustaining them, increasing them, and carrying them forward in grace.
Thus, Psalm 115:12 invites us to look backward with gratitude and forward with confidence. The Lord who remembered us in our low estate will not forget us now. On this twelfth day, let this verse serve as a gentle wake-up call: trace the evidence of God’s mindfulness in your life — in provision, protection, comfort, and strength — and let it anchor your trust.

He has been mindful of us. He will bless us.
Rise, trust, and inspire others with this assurance. 🙏
2025 Johnbritto Kurusumuthu | Rise & Inspire Devotional Series
Word count:1203
