Silas
Beloved
You are not alone in lifting prayers for safety right now, and God hears every single one. The flooding has upended plans and driven us to our knees, and that is never a wasted place to be. Sometimes in moments like this our prayers can feel frantic, as if we need to make a convincing case or inform God of what He already sees. But He knows the danger, He knows your fear, and He knows exactly where you are. Prayer is not a sales pitch where we try to work out a deal. It is the honest cry of the heart to a Father who is already intimately aware.
Be careful not to think of prayer as twisting God’s arm or proving your own righteousness. The street corner performance, the loud trumpet before the offering, those things were hollow in Paul’s old life even when he considered himself blameless. What matters now is the quiet, trusting heart that says, “Not my will, but Yours be done.” That kind of surrender does not come easily, especially when floodwaters rise. But it reshapes everything.
Sometimes the answer you want does not come in the form you expect. You may have been praying for protection, and the waters receded, and yet services are still cancelled. You may be praying for a swift return to normal, and it tarries. That is not God ignoring you. It may be His quiet “no” or “wait,” calling you into a deeper level of commitment. He wants us to lean on Him not just for the outcome we prefer but for His presence in the outcome He allows. Faith that only works when the road is clear is still trying to hold the reins.
In the meantime, pay attention to the sudden flashes of peace or clarity that surface in your mind. God often speaks not through a loud voice but through a quiet, almost subconscious impression, a gentle knowing that He is with you, a calm resolve to check on a neighbor, an unexpected Scripture rising to memory. These things do not come from your own chemical juices or random brain waves. They are gifts of the Spirit, and they are meant to anchor you when plans fall apart.
So keep praying for one another. Ask for safety, yes, and for swift recovery. But also ask for a faith that can say, “Even if the worst happens, Jesus is Lord.” That is the step of commitment that turns a scary cancellation into holy ground. The scarlet cord of protection hung from Rahab’s window, but her family had to stay inside the house. Obedience and trust kept them safe, not just a formula. In the same way, let your prayers be less about forcing an outcome and more about resting inside the covenant God has already made with you through Christ. He is faithful, and He will not let go.
Be careful not to think of prayer as twisting God’s arm or proving your own righteousness. The street corner performance, the loud trumpet before the offering, those things were hollow in Paul’s old life even when he considered himself blameless. What matters now is the quiet, trusting heart that says, “Not my will, but Yours be done.” That kind of surrender does not come easily, especially when floodwaters rise. But it reshapes everything.
Sometimes the answer you want does not come in the form you expect. You may have been praying for protection, and the waters receded, and yet services are still cancelled. You may be praying for a swift return to normal, and it tarries. That is not God ignoring you. It may be His quiet “no” or “wait,” calling you into a deeper level of commitment. He wants us to lean on Him not just for the outcome we prefer but for His presence in the outcome He allows. Faith that only works when the road is clear is still trying to hold the reins.
In the meantime, pay attention to the sudden flashes of peace or clarity that surface in your mind. God often speaks not through a loud voice but through a quiet, almost subconscious impression, a gentle knowing that He is with you, a calm resolve to check on a neighbor, an unexpected Scripture rising to memory. These things do not come from your own chemical juices or random brain waves. They are gifts of the Spirit, and they are meant to anchor you when plans fall apart.
So keep praying for one another. Ask for safety, yes, and for swift recovery. But also ask for a faith that can say, “Even if the worst happens, Jesus is Lord.” That is the step of commitment that turns a scary cancellation into holy ground. The scarlet cord of protection hung from Rahab’s window, but her family had to stay inside the house. Obedience and trust kept them safe, not just a formula. In the same way, let your prayers be less about forcing an outcome and more about resting inside the covenant God has already made with you through Christ. He is faithful, and He will not let go.
