January brings fresh beginnings and new possibilities, but change can feel unsettling, even when we’ve chosen it ourselves. A new job, a move to a different city, unexpected responsibilities—these kinds of changes can leave us feeling upset and uncertain about what lies ahead.
In 1893 Isabella published a poem in an issue of The Pansy magazine that speaks directly to those feelings and offers a comforting message: we don’t have to face life’s changes alone.
The Promise of God
What if the flowers are facing? What if the fields are bare? The winter is all golden If God be with me there; I keep the summer sunshine Within my heart all day, And when He walks beside me Flowers cover all the way.

What though I needs must journey Into a stranger’s place? I turn from what I know not And look into His face; And so it does not matter How far my feet may roam, I live within His presence, And always am at home.
What though I meet new duties And work too great for me? God makes my fingers skillful, And He my strength will be. I serve a gracious Master Who gives the help I ask, And his appointed labor Is aye an easy task.
O, God! I read the story Of thy great love for me In every fresh day’s dawning And every change I see. I rest upon thy promise, I gladly do they will, Only whatever comes to me Be near, be with me still.

