When God Works Good From What We Cannot Understand
Afternoon Moment
Some afternoons feel longer than others. The morning’s energy begins to fade, responsibilities press in from every side, and the weight of unfinished tasks sits heavy on our shoulders. It is often in these later hours of the day—when the body slows and the mind grows cloudy—that our frustrations speak the loudest. Yet it is also here, in this tender space, that the Lord invites us to pause, breathe, and remember that He is near.
Today, as the Church approaches the beginning of Advent, we turn to a theme central to this season: hope. Not wishful thinking, not optimism, but anchored hope—the kind that steadies the soul when life grows difficult. The writer of Hebrews gives us this promise: “This hope we have as an anchor of the soul, both sure and steadfast, and which enters the Presence behind the veil” (Hebrews 6:19). Our hope is not anchored in circumstances but in Christ who stands behind the veil, interceding for us.
And this afternoon, perhaps that is exactly what you need: not answers, not explanations, but an anchor.
Faith in the Middle of the Unseen
Our Scripture reading from Hebrews 11:23–29 reminds us that the people of faith often walked through long seasons of uncertainty. Moses’ parents hid him for three months, not because they could guarantee the future, but because they trusted the God who governed it. Moses himself chose mistreatment with God’s people rather than comfort in Pharaoh’s courts. He walked through the sea before the waters parted. He obeyed before understanding.
Their faith reminds us that obedience always precedes clarity. When life feels heavy, it is tempting to demand explanations from God, but the saints of old learned to walk by trust long before they saw the outcome. The anchor of Hebrews 6:19 was not placed in calm seas but in the storm’s center.
As Oswald Chambers wisely wrote, “Suffering either makes fiends of us or it makes saints of us; it depends entirely on our relationship towards God.” Trouble has a way of revealing what we have been relying on. If our confidence rests on comfort, ease, or predictability, suffering will unravel us. But if our hope rests in Christ, suffering becomes a deep well from which God draws spiritual strength, compassion, humility, and wisdom.
Many believers, if asked, would deny being angry with God when trouble enters their lives. Yet irritation often seeps out in the way we pray, in the tone we use when we speak of God’s sovereignty, or in the weariness that whispers, “Lord… why didn’t You stop this?” Somewhere in our hearts, we know God is capable of halting any trial with a single word. So when He doesn’t, frustration creeps in, not because we doubt His power but because we don’t understand His plan.
But Hebrews reminds us that faith does not silence honest questions; faith simply refuses to let them turn us bitter.
When Hurt Presses In—Kneel Instead of Run
The study invites us to take a posture we often resist: kneeling in prayer. When disappointment, heartache, or confusion knocks on the door of your afternoon, your first instinct may be to search for an escape route—something to fix, someone to call, a distraction to reach for. But searching for a way out often magnifies the problem.
Prayer, however, places the problem in God’s hands instead of your own.
In prayer, we do not come as experts, strategists, or survivors—we come as children. God is your heavenly Counselor, the One who understands the entire landscape of your circumstances. He sees the beginning, the middle, and the end. He knows what this moment will produce in your life if committed to Him.
The study encourages us to ask God why He allowed certain things into our lives. Not with accusation, but with humility. God would rather we come to Him with our confusion than hide from Him in our pain, the way Adam hid in Eden. Honest prayer opens the door for God to reshape our perspective.
And sometimes, God uses people to help in that process. Talking through your struggles with someone who honors Christ, seeks His best for you, and values confidentiality can be deeply healing. Wisdom often flows through relationships, and many burdens become lighter when shared.
But even good conversations must return to God in prayer. The study reminds us that the healthiest way to end such moments is by placing the hurt in the Lord’s hands, asking Him to bring good from it.
When God Works All Things for Good
Romans 8:28 is not a sentimental phrase or a spiritual bumper sticker. It is a pillar of hope for the hurting. “God works all things together for good…” does not mean all things are good. Pain, betrayal, injustice, illness, and loss are not good. They are wounds in a fallen world. Yet in His unsearchable wisdom, God enters the cracks of our suffering and begins weaving redemption into the places that hurt the most.
He brings compassion out of sorrow.
Strength out of weakness.
Perseverance out of trial.
And character out of disappointment.
He does not merely repair what was broken—He transforms it.
This is why Hebrews speaks of hope as an anchor. When we face suffering, hope keeps us from drifting into despair. When life feels senseless, hope keeps us from collapsing inward. When disappointment grows heavy, hope whispers that God is still writing the story.
Afternoons can be long, but God is longer.
Days can feel overwhelming, but God is deeper.
Our strength may fade, but His strength renews us.
Let this be your moment to breathe, pray, and remember that God is at work—even here, even now, even in this.
A Simple Prayer for This Afternoon
Dear Lord, please take my hurt and frustration and bring something good out of them. Give me a new perspective on my circumstances and renewed strength to face the challenges ahead. Anchor me in Your hope, and keep my heart steady in Your presence. Amen.
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