all devotionals

The 3 AM Email That Shifted Priorities

A friend of mine was working late into the night, 3,000 miles away from home.

At 3:00 a.m., a new email popped up in his inbox. But it wasn’t from a client or a colleague. The subject line read: “Where are you?”

It was from his 10-year-old daughter.

She couldn’t sleep. She missed her dad and wanted to know why he was always away.

That one email broke him.

He realized he had been putting work first, family second, and God somewhere in the background.

Faith reorders what matters most.

So he shifted.

He began his days in prayer, rather than with his inbox.
He made faith the anchor and family the priority.
Work still mattered, but it found its rightful place.

The Bible says in Matthew 6:33:  “But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well.”

When his rhythm shifted, everything else followed. His stress decreased. His presence with his family increased. And, most importantly, his work became rooted in purpose rather than pressure.

Success is more than promotions and paychecks.

So now, let me ask you:

If your family sent you an email in the middle of the night, what would it say?

Your legacy won’t be the hours you logged at the office. It will be the love you invested at home, anchored in faith.

This is some text inside of a div block.
sponsored by
This is some text inside of a div block.

More American Christian Articles

Are Your Goals SMART Enough?

Set SMART goals rooted in faith. Align ambition with God’s purpose & turn your inspired dreams into God-glorifying action.

What I Learned about Depression from Michael S. Lundy

Struggling with mental health isn’t a failure of faith. Learn how compassion and presence can be the greatest form of ministry.

Love Yourself as God Loves You

Love yourself like God does—on purpose. Steward your life, trust His voice, and take faithful action even before you feel ready.

What’s So Good About Good Friday?

Good Friday invites surrender and sacrifice—not as loss, but as the beginning of resurrection life, purpose, and eternal strength.