Why You Aren’t Lacking Blessing, You’re Lacking Capacity
We read Malachi 3:10 and picture God cracking open the windows of heaven, pouring out a blessing so massive there won’t be room enough to hold it.
Then we look at our own lives and think: “Okay, God. I’m trusting You. I’m doing my part. So where is it?”
Read the verse again, slowly. It doesn’t say God will run out of supply. It says we will run out of room. The floodgates aren’t stuck—they’re already open. The problem was never the size of the downpour. It’s the size of our bucket.
That’s the paradigm shift: We don’t pray to change God’s mind about blessing us. We pray to expand our capacity to hold what He’s already given.
The Reservoir Is Already Full
A lot of us live with slot-machine theology—drop in a coin of obedience, pull the lever, hope for a payout. Paul demolishes that idea in Ephesians:
“Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ.” (Ephesians 1:3)
Notice the tense. Not will bless. Not is considering it. Has blessed. Past tense. Finished. In the spirit realm, your account isn’t pending approval—it’s already funded. Every bit of wisdom, peace, breakthrough, and resource you’ll ever need was signed and sealed in Christ before you ever asked.
So why does earth feel like a drought when heaven is reporting a flood? Because a spiritual reality has to travel through a pipeline to become a lived experience—and most of our pipelines are the width of a straw.
As Much As They Would
Picture the hillside in Galilee. Five thousand men, plus women and children, sitting in the grass, stomachs growling. Jesus holds up five loaves and two fish—a comically small container for that much need.
But watch what John notices, almost in passing:
“And Jesus took the loaves; and when he had given thanks, he distributed to the disciples, and the disciples to them that were set down; and likewise of the fishes as much as they would.” (John 6:11)
As much as they would.
The bread didn’t stop multiplying because Jesus got tired or heaven ran low. It stopped when people said, “I’m full. No more.” The only ceiling on the miracle was the size of the appetite and the reach of the hands holding baskets. Show up with a bigger basket, and there was more bread waiting for it.
God doesn’t force a gallon of glory into a pint-sized life. He doesn’t stop pouring—we stop providing something to catch it in.
According to the Power That Works in You
So how do we actually enlarge the container? Paul hands us the key at the end of Ephesians 3:
“Now unto him that is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think, according to the power that worketh in us.” (Ephesians 3:20)
We love the first half—exceeding abundantly above. We rarely sit with the second half: according to the power that works in us.
The ceiling on God’s “abundantly above” isn’t set by His ability. It’s set by your internal capacity—your faith, your obedience, your understanding of who you actually are. The word for power here, dunamis, means inherent ability, force, capability. What shows up on the outside will always be proportional to what’s been built on the inside.
How You Actually Expand the Container: Renew Your Mind
Here’s the part most of us skip past: the primary tool for expanding your capacity isn’t more striving—it’s thinking differently about who you already are. Paul says it plainly:
“And be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God.” (Romans 12:2)
Transformation doesn’t start with your circumstances changing. It starts with your mind changing about your identity. Here’s why that matters so much: you can’t hold more than you believe you’re allowed to have. A person who secretly believes they’re still an outsider, still disqualified, still the same person they were before Christ, will unconsciously shrink every blessing down to fit that smaller identity—no matter how much faith language they use out loud.
So renewing your mind isn’t positive thinking. It’s replacing an old, false identity with the true one. Practically, that looks like:
- Stop rehearsing who you used to be. Paul says “if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new” (2 Corinthians 5:17). Every time you narrate yourself using old labels—broken, unworthy, always behind, never enough—you’re re-shrinking a container God already enlarged. Catch the old sentence mid-thought and correct it out loud: “That’s who I was. Here’s who I am.”
- Learn your actual legal standing, on purpose. You can’t walk in an identity you’ve never studied. Read the “in Christ” statements slowly and let them sink in: you are seated with Him in heavenly places (Ephesians 2:6), you are a child and heir (Romans 8:16–17), you are the righteousness of God in Him (2 Corinthians 5:21). These aren’t slogans—they’re your legal deed to the property. Most people are camping outside a house they already own because no one showed them the deed.
- Let your self-talk match your sonship, not your struggle. Ephesians 4:23 calls this being “renewed in the spirit of your mind.” This is a daily, sometimes hourly, discipline—not a one-time decision. Every thought that says “that’s too much for someone like me” is a small hand shrinking the basket. Every thought that says “I am who He says I am” is a hand stretching it wider.
- Practice believing before you see. Faith capacity grows the same way physical capacity grows—under load. Take God at His word in small things before you need Him for large ones. Each time you trust Him and watch Him come through, your container permanently gets a little bigger. It doesn’t shrink back down.
- Get around people who see you rightly. It’s hard to renew your mind alone in an echo chamber of old opinions—including your own. Let people who actually know who you are in Christ speak into your life, and let their vision of you correct your smaller self-image.
This is the deepest reason renewing your mind expands capacity: identity determines appetite, and appetite determines how much you can receive. The five thousand didn’t get more bread because they tried harder to be hungry. They got more because they genuinely believed there was more coming and kept their hands open for it. When you know—not hope, know—that you are a fully adopted, fully righteous, fully equipped child of God, you stop flinching at abundance. You stop unconsciously capping the blessing at the size of your old self-image. You start bringing bigger baskets, because you finally believe the bread is actually for you.
Stop Praying for Rain. Build a Bigger Cistern.
If your life feels cramped, or you’ve hit what feels like a spiritual ceiling, stop asking God to open a heaven that’s already wide open. Look at your container instead.
- Renew your mind: Are you still thinking like the old version of you, or like the new creation you actually are?
- Expand your obedience: Are you holding back your firstfruits while wondering why the storehouse feels jammed?
- Stretch your vision: Are you asking for just enough bread to survive the afternoon, or bringing baskets to gather what’s left over?
Remember the widow in 2 Kings 4—she gathered every empty jar her neighbors had. The oil kept flowing exactly as long as she had a vessel to catch it. The moment the last jar was full, the oil stopped. Not because God ran dry. Because she ran out of containers.
God has already spoken a resounding, eternal yes over your life in Christ. The storehouse is bursting with your inheritance. So renew your mind, throw away the small buckets, and build a capacity that finally matches the generosity of your King.