
“The king appointed singers to walk ahead of the army, singing to the LORD and praising him for his holy splendor. This is what they sang: ‘Give thanks to the LORD; his faithful love endures forever!’” (2 Chronicles 20:21 NLT)
Pastor, few things strengthen your soul like thanking God before you see the breakthrough.
When King Jehoshaphat faced three enemy armies, he didn’t rally the troops with a new strategy or a clever battle plan. Instead, he placed the choir in front of the soldiers—literally leading with worship. They sang, “Give thanks to the LORD; his faithful love endures forever!” (2 Chronicles 20:21 NLT).
Imagine the optics: musicians on the front line and warriors behind them.
But Jehoshaphat wasn’t being reckless. He was being faithful. He was reminding the people that the battle belonged to the Lord. Their formation was a declaration of trust. Their praise was tangible, public, verbalized faith.
And, pastor, that’s the kind of faith God invites you to live out too.
It doesn’t take much faith to thank God after the answer comes. But when attendance dips, when criticism cuts, when the budget is strained, or when prayers seem unanswered—that’s when thanking God in advance becomes an act of courage.
Here’s the miracle: “At the very moment they began to sing and give praise, the LORD caused the armies of Ammon, Moab, and Mount Seir to start fighting among themselves” (2 Chronicles 20:22 NLT).
The breakthrough began “at the very moment” they worshiped.
Pastor, you carry pressures that most people will never see. Some battles feel unwinnable. Some problems feel unmovable. But thanking God in advance helps your heart shift from fear to faith, from striving to surrender.
So today, take a moment to thank God for what you haven’t seen yet.
Thank him for the wisdom you’ll need this week.
Thank him for the person he’s transforming behind the scenes.
Thank him for the breakthroughs in your church that haven’t yet arrived.
God is already working in ways you can’t see. And just like Jehoshaphat, you can lead from a place of praise—confident that the battle still belongs to the Lord.