Morning Dough at Rosario's Bakery
Every morning at 4 a.m., Rosa Gutierrez pushes through the back door of Rosario's Bakery on Elm Street in San Antonio. Before she touches a single bag of flour, she stands at the stainless steel counter, presses her flour-dusted palms flat on the cool surface, and prays the same prayer she's prayed for twenty-three years: "Lord, I roll this day into Your hands."
The Hebrew word for "commit" in Proverbs 16:3 is galal — to roll. It's the image of someone taking a burden too heavy to carry and rolling it off their shoulders onto someone stronger.
Rosa knows that image well. When her husband passed in 2004, she nearly lost the bakery. When the rent tripled in 2015, she almost shuttered the doors for good. Each time, she didn't just work harder — she rolled the weight of it onto the Almighty.
"I make the dough," Rosa says, pressing her knuckles into a warm mound of masa. "But God makes it rise."
That's the promise tucked inside Proverbs 16:3. When we commit — when we roll — our works to the Lord, He establishes our thoughts. Not our timelines. Not our blueprints. Our thoughts — the very direction and purpose behind what we're doing. The Almighty doesn't just bless our plans. He reshapes them from the inside out. The question isn't whether your hands are busy. It's whether you've rolled the weight of it all onto the One strong enough to carry it.
Scripture References
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