Silas
Beloved Servant
You are standing right now on one of the hardest battlefields any of us ever face. The pressure is not just a vague discomfort; it’s a weight you feel in your bones, and in moments like this, the storm is very real. You have already done the most important thing by crying out for strength and declaring that you are here for a reason. That is not a small confession; it is the tether that holds the boat to the dock while the waves try to pull it apart.
Often, when we are hit by a wave that makes no sense, we immediately start to assume that the chaos must be a sign we have done something wrong, or that God has pulled back His hand. The old story of suffering shows us just how false that assumption can be. That righteous man lost everything despite being right in the center of God’s will, and his awful pressure was not a verdict from heaven about his performance. He didn’t understand what was happening in the unseen realm, and neither do we. You don’t have to figure out the cosmic reason for this hard day. The God who allowed this weight to land on your shoulders is not punishing you; He is the one bragging about you in places you cannot see.
Hear this clearly: the voices that want to tell you that you’re failing, or that the dread and the trembling mean you’ve been marked as a hypocrite, those are miserable comforters. When a man sits in the ash heap and his grief outweighs the sand of the sea, the last thing he needs is a religious lecture telling him he just needs to get right so everything will be okay. The pressure you feel is not the hand of a God who has forgotten you. The enemy’s whole wager is that you will buckle and curse the circumstance, but you have already proven him a liar in real time by submitting yourself to God’s will right in the middle of the pain.
All the cries of that old story for a mediator, for someone to stand between a frazzled human and a holy God with a hand on both, find their solid answer in Jesus Christ. He looks at a day where you feel you might not survive and says, “My strength is perfected in weakness.” He is not standing at a distance wringing His hands. He stood up in the storm and spoke to the wind and waves, and He does that for you today. The rod you feel pressing down is not there to terrify you; it is covered by the hand of the one who was broken for you.
There is hope for a tree that is cut down. At the scent of water, even from the dead-looking roots, a fresh branch will spring up. You prayed for this day to turn around. Lean into the fact that your help does not come from the false strength of stones or brass, but from the one who answers the cry of the heart. Your inability to see how this will work out just means the end of your own strength has been reached, and that is exactly where trust begins. The story isn't over, and the God who writes the last chapter turns all that sorrow back into joy.
Often, when we are hit by a wave that makes no sense, we immediately start to assume that the chaos must be a sign we have done something wrong, or that God has pulled back His hand. The old story of suffering shows us just how false that assumption can be. That righteous man lost everything despite being right in the center of God’s will, and his awful pressure was not a verdict from heaven about his performance. He didn’t understand what was happening in the unseen realm, and neither do we. You don’t have to figure out the cosmic reason for this hard day. The God who allowed this weight to land on your shoulders is not punishing you; He is the one bragging about you in places you cannot see.
Hear this clearly: the voices that want to tell you that you’re failing, or that the dread and the trembling mean you’ve been marked as a hypocrite, those are miserable comforters. When a man sits in the ash heap and his grief outweighs the sand of the sea, the last thing he needs is a religious lecture telling him he just needs to get right so everything will be okay. The pressure you feel is not the hand of a God who has forgotten you. The enemy’s whole wager is that you will buckle and curse the circumstance, but you have already proven him a liar in real time by submitting yourself to God’s will right in the middle of the pain.
All the cries of that old story for a mediator, for someone to stand between a frazzled human and a holy God with a hand on both, find their solid answer in Jesus Christ. He looks at a day where you feel you might not survive and says, “My strength is perfected in weakness.” He is not standing at a distance wringing His hands. He stood up in the storm and spoke to the wind and waves, and He does that for you today. The rod you feel pressing down is not there to terrify you; it is covered by the hand of the one who was broken for you.
There is hope for a tree that is cut down. At the scent of water, even from the dead-looking roots, a fresh branch will spring up. You prayed for this day to turn around. Lean into the fact that your help does not come from the false strength of stones or brass, but from the one who answers the cry of the heart. Your inability to see how this will work out just means the end of your own strength has been reached, and that is exactly where trust begins. The story isn't over, and the God who writes the last chapter turns all that sorrow back into joy.
