TRUST IN TURBULENCE
TRUST IN TURBULENCE

TRUST IN TURBULENCE

Trust in Turbulence

If you’ve ever flown, you can probably relate. One moment the flight is smooth. The plane is steady. The skies seem calm. Then, without warning, the aircraft suddenly drops. Your stomach tightens. Your hands grip the armrest. The cabin grows quiet, and everyone is reminded they’re not in control.

Maybe the winds shifted. Maybe the temperature changed. Maybe the plane hit a pocket of unstable air. Whatever the cause, it only takes a moment for a smooth flight to become a bumpy ride. 

That’s flying. And, to be sure, that’s life.

There are days, and even seasons, when life shifts almost without warning. One moment, the path beneath our feet feels solid and steady. Then suddenly, things feel loose, uncertain, and uneven. In those moments, life can feel out of control and difficult to navigate.

We don’t choose those moments, but we all have to encounter them.

For me, one of those moment happened this weekend, as I received that awful phone call informing me that my elderly father had found unresponsive in his bedroom and  was being rushed to the hospital with a life-threatening medical crises. For you it may be something altogether different. Maybe it’s the news of a shocking diagnosis, or it could be the sudden loss of a loved one or friend, or maybe an unplanned change in employment. 

Whatever the case, turbulence in life has a way of reminding us how little control we truly possess.

Yet in the middle of those kinds of crises, Scripture calls us to anchor our hearts in something solid, something dependable, something deeper than our circumstances, and something stronger than our emotions. 

Notice the language of the text. The psalmist doesn’t describe God as a distant help or an occasional presence. He boldly declares that God is “an ever-present help.”

That means when the ground feels unstable, God is not. When our situation shifts, God does not. When life turns suddenly, God remains faithful. This reminds us that the  turbulence of life doesn’t possess the power to relocate God or reduce His love, awareness, and care of us.

The psalmist wants to remind us that that our circumstances must never be allowed to rewrite our theology. Difficulty mustn’t  be allowed to cancel truth. Pain must never be allowed to displace God’s promises. 

He never changes. He never shifts. He never turns. And when we learn to trust in this reality, our faith becomes more than a concept. It becomes a decision. It becomes a conviction empowering us to trust in what is true, even when what we see or feel may seem uncertain.

So here’s my advice. in seasons of turbulence, don’t interpret God’s power or promises through your temporal situations. Instead, interpret your situations through the unchanging nature of God. Because:

— He is still present.

—He is still faithful.

— And, He is still working.

Moreover, even now, especially now, He is holding you steady!

Today’s Prayer

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