Silas
Servant of All
Isolation can wear down hope, thinning it until you feel you have nothing left to hold onto. Yet the very fact you are crying out for clarity, confidence, and joy is a sign that life still stirs inside you. Hope, true hope, is not something we manufacture by trying harder or thinking positive thoughts. It rises from a different place.
The fear of the Lord, that reverence and trust that rests in who God is, becomes a deep well of confidence. When you don’t know what to pray or how these lonely days could possibly turn around, you can still place your weight there: “Lord, Your will be done.” That surrender isn’t weakness. It’s the uprightness of your ways, a quiet integrity that says, “I trust Him even when I cannot see.”
It’s tempting to chase after hopes that are only a spider’s web. They look like they might hold, but they snap the moment pressure comes. The world offers quick escapes, shortcuts to fulfillment that never last. The joy of the hypocrite is only for a moment. But the joy God gives is different. It often springs up in the very place where we faced the chastening of the Almighty, not because He has cast us off, but because He corrects those He loves. A man or woman corrected by God, yet clinging to Him, can still sing in the darkness.
There is a hope even for a tree that is cut down: it can sprout again from its roots. How much more for a person made in God’s image? Your isolation feels like the pit, like the dust where all strength fails and every plan lies broken. Yet in that pit, the cry is still born: “I know that my Redeemer lives.” That hope does not die. It reaches beyond what you can see or touch, anchored in Jesus Christ, who walked through suffering and now lives forever. Because He lives, your story does not end in the grave. This life isn’t all.
As you seek clarity, remember that wisdom comes from His mouth. As you ask for confidence, let it be the confidence that God is working all things together for good, even when it hurts. As you pray for joy, let it be the joy of finding yourself right in the center of His will, not a surface happiness, but a deep satisfaction that you are doing what He would have you do, even if the only thing you do today is wait on Him.
He will yet see you through. You will yet lie down in safety and not be afraid. The day will come when the widow’s heart sings, when the poor have hope, and when iniquity shuts her mouth. Until then, hold fast to the hope set before you. It will not fail.
The fear of the Lord, that reverence and trust that rests in who God is, becomes a deep well of confidence. When you don’t know what to pray or how these lonely days could possibly turn around, you can still place your weight there: “Lord, Your will be done.” That surrender isn’t weakness. It’s the uprightness of your ways, a quiet integrity that says, “I trust Him even when I cannot see.”
It’s tempting to chase after hopes that are only a spider’s web. They look like they might hold, but they snap the moment pressure comes. The world offers quick escapes, shortcuts to fulfillment that never last. The joy of the hypocrite is only for a moment. But the joy God gives is different. It often springs up in the very place where we faced the chastening of the Almighty, not because He has cast us off, but because He corrects those He loves. A man or woman corrected by God, yet clinging to Him, can still sing in the darkness.
There is a hope even for a tree that is cut down: it can sprout again from its roots. How much more for a person made in God’s image? Your isolation feels like the pit, like the dust where all strength fails and every plan lies broken. Yet in that pit, the cry is still born: “I know that my Redeemer lives.” That hope does not die. It reaches beyond what you can see or touch, anchored in Jesus Christ, who walked through suffering and now lives forever. Because He lives, your story does not end in the grave. This life isn’t all.
As you seek clarity, remember that wisdom comes from His mouth. As you ask for confidence, let it be the confidence that God is working all things together for good, even when it hurts. As you pray for joy, let it be the joy of finding yourself right in the center of His will, not a surface happiness, but a deep satisfaction that you are doing what He would have you do, even if the only thing you do today is wait on Him.
He will yet see you through. You will yet lie down in safety and not be afraid. The day will come when the widow’s heart sings, when the poor have hope, and when iniquity shuts her mouth. Until then, hold fast to the hope set before you. It will not fail.
