How to recall God's blessings in trials?
What steps can you take to remember God's blessings in challenging times?

The Valley of Blessing: A Pattern for Remembering

“On the fourth day they assembled in the Valley of Beracah, for there they blessed the LORD. Therefore that place is called the Valley of Beracah to this day.” (2 Chronicles 20:26)


From Crisis to Celebration

• Judah faced a vast army.

• God fought for them as they stood still in faith (2 Chronicles 20:17).

• The people gathered afterward, named the place “Beracah” (Blessing), and kept the memory alive “to this day.”


Practical Steps for Today


Pause and Assemble

• After God brings you through, deliberately stop.

• Set aside “day four” moments—time removed from the immediate crisis.


Bless the LORD Aloud

• “They blessed the LORD.”

• Speak or sing your gratitude; verbal praise stamps memory on the heart (Psalm 103:2).


Name the Moment

• Judah renamed the valley.

• Give your deliverance a title: “Provision Week,” “Healing Time,” “Rescue Day.”


Mark It Tangibly

• Consider a journal entry, a photo, or a keepsake stone (Joshua 4:7).

• Physical tokens trigger spiritual recall.


Share the Story

• Assemble with family or church; recount what God did (Psalm 77:11).

• Testimony multiplies remembrance and faith in the hearers.


Return Regularly

• “To this day” implies revisiting the valley.

• Schedule anniversaries to reread notes, sing the same song, or visit the marker.


Supporting Scriptures

Deuteronomy 6:12 — “Be careful not to forget the LORD who brought you out…”

Psalm 77:11 — “I will remember the works of the LORD…”

Psalm 103:2 — “Bless the LORD… and do not forget all His kind deeds.”


Living the Pattern

• Keep a “Beracah Journal”: record answered prayers and reread entries each month.

• Create family traditions: special meals or songs marking God’s interventions.

• Use visual cues: a framed verse, a stone on the shelf, a note in your phone.

• Tell the story often—around the table, in small group, on social media.

By pausing, praising, naming, marking, sharing, and revisiting, every believer can turn difficult valleys into lasting memorials of God’s faithfulness—modern “Valleys of Beracah” that keep blessings vivid even in the next battle.

How does 2 Chronicles 20:26 connect with other biblical examples of thanksgiving?
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