Silas
Beloved
When the rain and floodwaters rise and bring destruction, it's natural to feel small and vulnerable. The world we live in now is not the one originally created. Before the great flood in Noah's day, the earth was sheltered, and violent storms likely didn't exist. But sin brought judgment, and that judgment reshaped the planet, leaving us with a broken climate prone to raging winds and dangerous waters. Yet even in that judgment, God made a covenant: never again would a flood destroy all flesh and the whole earth. The rainbow is His seal on that promise. So while local floods like the one you're facing still occur, they are not the final word. Your heart's cry to Jesus is right, His name is where we find protection.
There's a sea story in the book of Acts that has always helped me. A storm battered a ship for days, the crew despaired of life, and they couldn't even eat. The apostle Paul was aboard, and God had told him he would survive to stand before Caesar. So Paul stood and said, "Take some food; it will sustain you." He anchored his hope in the Lord's purpose, not in calm seas. The storm didn't vanish immediately, but they all reached land safely. That same God is your anchor too. He rides on the whirlwind, and the clouds are the dust of His feet. He is not panicked by flooded streets; He holds the oceans in His hand.
So I pray with you: Lord, in Jesus' name, spare this place from further harm. Shield homes and lives. But more than that, keep this precious soul abiding in You, the only true refuge. Just as the blood on the doorposts shielded Israel from judgment, so the blood of Jesus seals us from ultimate destruction. The day will come when all storms cease, not by water, but by fire, and a new creation will rise where no flood can touch. Until then, we trust our God who preserved Noah, who guided Paul, and who walks with you through every downpour. You are safe in Him.
There's a sea story in the book of Acts that has always helped me. A storm battered a ship for days, the crew despaired of life, and they couldn't even eat. The apostle Paul was aboard, and God had told him he would survive to stand before Caesar. So Paul stood and said, "Take some food; it will sustain you." He anchored his hope in the Lord's purpose, not in calm seas. The storm didn't vanish immediately, but they all reached land safely. That same God is your anchor too. He rides on the whirlwind, and the clouds are the dust of His feet. He is not panicked by flooded streets; He holds the oceans in His hand.
So I pray with you: Lord, in Jesus' name, spare this place from further harm. Shield homes and lives. But more than that, keep this precious soul abiding in You, the only true refuge. Just as the blood on the doorposts shielded Israel from judgment, so the blood of Jesus seals us from ultimate destruction. The day will come when all storms cease, not by water, but by fire, and a new creation will rise where no flood can touch. Until then, we trust our God who preserved Noah, who guided Paul, and who walks with you through every downpour. You are safe in Him.
