Are you facing a situation where you felt truly defeated and maybe even a bit hopeless?
Day after day … month after month … year after year …
You have prayed, wept, read and applied the truth in God’s word, dealt with your own sin and shortcomings, sought Godly counsel, and applied said counsel time and time again…
And while God has changed you in the process and the gratitude within you cannot be feigned, you find the burden of the situation continuing to bring sorrow after sorrow.
Hopelessness begins to settle over your heart like a dark cloud and the tears in your eyes like its teetering raindrops.
What hope have we as believers when the trials of life seem overwhelming? What should our response be as followers of the Christ who Himself bore sorrow after sorrow on our behalf?
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I stared at the waters as I walked alongside the lake near my home. The clouds overhead were gray and dense as their rain droplets threatened to fall. To a certain degree, my thoughts were just as heavy and pensive as I pondered and prayed and yet, I couldn’t help but notice the peaceful stillness of the water beside me.
A familiar passage of Scripture stirred in my heart and I began to softly murmur the words King David penned so long ago in what we now know as Psalm 23 …
“He makes me lie down in green pastures;
He leads me beside quiet waters.
He restores my soul;
He guides me in the paths of righteousness
For His name’s sake.”

I gazed over the stillness of the lake as the words, “He leads me beside the quiet waters. He restores my soul.” echoed as a gentle and grounding reminder to look to Him for strength for each challenge,
healing for each sorrow, and rest for the weariness.
As I continued along, an old hymn rose from the memories of my past and awoke a melody in my spirit as some of the words whispered through my mind …
“Be still, my soul: the Lord is on your side;
bear patiently the cross of grief or pain;
leave to your God to order and provide;
in ev’ry change he faithful will remain.
Be still, my soul: your best, your heav’nly Friend
through thorny ways leads to a joyful end.”
Sometimes I love when the Lord does this and sometimes … I am not as pleased.
I want Him to do something. I am weary of this situation in my life and I am weary of walking through it alone. This time as I prayed, I wanted a firm reassurance that He was going to do something. I wanted a sign from heaven that my life would somehow become easier.
Instead, I heard, ‘Be still.’
I heard, ‘Bear patiently the cross of grief and pain.’
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Tiny raindrops began to fall from the sky as my walk was nearing the end. Whether my face was damp from those raindrops or the ones from my eyes, I do not know.
But perhaps you will read with me another verse from this hymn and consider how these words point us to our true hope in the storms of life …
“Be still, my soul: your God will undertake
to guide the future as he has the past.
Your hope, your confidence let nothing shake;
all now mysterious shall be bright at last.
Be still, my soul: the waves and winds still know
his voice who ruled them while he dwelt below.”
Not much is known of the writer of this hymn, aside from her name, that she was born in 1697, and that she seemed to have lived a mostly solitary life in a religious convent. These words, her only hymn to be translated into the English language, remind us to focus our minds and hearts on the God who has proven Himself faithful in the past and who continues to guide us in all of our tomorrows. We are reminded to let nothing in this life shake our confidence, and yes, even our hope, in His love and care.
Even when we do not understand, He is good.
Be still my soul.
Sometimes we want things we were not meant to have.
Because He loves us, the Father says no.
Faith is willing not to have what God is not willing to give.
Furthermore, faith does not insist upon an explanation.
It is enough to know His promises to give what is good –
He knows so much more about us than we do.
~Elisabeth Elliott~
*Be Still my Soul ~ written by Kathrina von Schlegel (hymnary.org)