Welcome! This week we’re in Chapter One of Micca
Campbell’s An Untroubled Heart.
“No
matter what our emotions or circumstances may say, the truth is there is
nowhere we can go to escape God’s presence. Though it might not feel like it or
look like it, God is always near.” (Micca Campbell, An Untroubled Heart)
Can you relate to this? I certainly can! There are times I can’t feel God’s presence. I know He’s near me, but I feel like I can’t
get to Him.
I recently wrote about knowing
God is with me even when I can’t feel
it. It fits this chapter and what’s on my mind so well, I’m going to repost it.
If you have read it before, I ask your forgiveness for reposting. (I don’t make
it a habit.) However, because I often benefit from rereading my own posts, I’d
like to ask you to also reread it.
I Know He’s With Me
by Laura Rath
Sometimes I can’t feel God’s presence…but I know He’s there.
Usually it’s when I’ve hit a feeling of despair…a situation
isn’t going well…I’m tired, stressed, or angry…life isn’t going the way I hoped
or wanted…and I can’t feel His presence.
But I know He’s there. And sometimes knowing instead of feeling
has to be enough.
Those moments of despair are times I can either grow closer
and more dependent on God, or turn away from Him. The enemy would love to watch
us turn away. He wants us to question God’s love for us, and the enemy knows
that in our times of desperation, we are most vulnerable. We are wounded and susceptible to his lies.
That is when I have to rely on what I know, and not on what I feel.
I may feel alone, but I know God is
with me. When I cry out to Him, I may not hear an answer, but I know He is there.
God’s Word says…
“This is my command—be strong and courageous! Do not be
afraid or discouraged. For the Lord your God is with you wherever you go. He
will neither fail you nor abandon you.” (Joshua 1:9, Deuteronomy 31:6, 8 NLT)
When I get to those times of crying out, “Where are you,
God?!?” I know He’s there, but I long to see and feel Him. Sometimes He answers
right away, through a feeling, a Scripture verse, or something that calms me
down. But other times, I have to wait…patiently.
Because I know God is there and hasn’t left me, I continue
to pray and talk to Him. I must keep myself in God’s Word, trusting in His
promises. And I look back at times God showed Himself to me—in His time and His
way.
The waiting is not easy, but knowing He’s there helps me wait until I feel it again. The moments
of desperation are often when my faith and trust in God can grow the most.
However, I can’t wait only for the times of despair to turn
to Him. I must be in His Word at all times or I won’t be prepared for the tough
times.
Every school practices fire drills. Why? So that if there
ever is a fire, the children know what to do. In an emergency, panic can
immobilize us, especially if we are not prepared and don’t know where to go.
When I get to a low point and I can’t feel God’s presence,
panic can be immobilizing. It helps greatly if I already know where to go—God’s
Word. I start with Scripture verses that are my favorites or have brought me
comfort in the past. Then I’ll often let myself continue to read wherever I am
in the Bible, and that’s how I find new verses that help me wait on God and
bring me peace. I believe He guides us to those verses, knowing what we need to
hear from His Word.
There are other things we can do to keep us turned toward
God when we are waiting to feel His presence:
- Know that He is there!
- Continue to pray.
- Stay in God’s Word.
- Write out favorite Scripture verses to keep with you at
all times.
- Remember other times when you have seen God’s work in your
life, remembering that He knows what’s best for us.
- Listen to Christian music.
- Talk with friends or other people who are like-minded in
Christ.
- Get enough rest. (Being overtired is sure to affect my
thoughts and feelings when things are already not going well.)
Do you have others to add to this list? Please share by
leaving a comment.
In Christ,
Laura