Trusting God for the Unseen
“I reserve seven thousand in Israel—all whose knees have not bowed down to Baal and whose mouths have not kissed him.” – 1 Kings 19:18
There are
seasons when faithfulness can feel lonely. You pray, you serve, you try to do
what’s right, and it seems like nothing is changing. In those seasons, it’s
easy to wonder whether your effort matters or whether anyone notices the quiet
sacrifices you make. It’s a vulnerable place to be—caught between what you
believe and what you see, between the promise and the proof.
In those
moments, doubt can feel like a constant whisper in the back of your mind,
quietly questioning everything you’ve poured your heart into. It tells you that
your efforts don’t matter, that your obedience is going unnoticed, that maybe
you misheard God and are walking a path that leads nowhere.
That whisper
can be disorienting because it strikes at the core of your intentions—you’re
trying, you’re showing up, you’re doing what you believe is right, and yet the
silence around you feels like a verdict. It’s a deeply human experience to
stand in that tension, where your faith feels heavier than usual and your
confidence feels thinner than you’d like to admit.
That space
between what you believe and what you see can feel like standing on a bridge
suspended over fog. You know there’s something solid on the other side, but you
can’t see it yet. You’re holding onto a promise that hasn’t materialized,
trusting a process that hasn’t revealed its purpose, and waiting for proof that
hasn’t arrived.
It’s
vulnerable because you’re exposed—your hopes, your prayers, your quiet
sacrifices—all laid bare without reward. So it was for Elijah in 1 Kings 19.
The prophet stood on the mountain exhausted, discouraged, and convinced that
his ministry had failed. He told God he was the only faithful prophet left, the
last one still standing for truth.
Elijah’s
words came from a place of deep loneliness and emotional fatigue. Yet God
responded not with rebuke, but with revelation — a reminder that Elijah’s
perspective was limited, and that divine activity is never confined to what
human eyes can observe.
God’s quiet
answer – “you are not alone.” Paraphrased even further, “There are 7,000
others like you who have not bowed to Baal.” That revelation reframed everything. While Elijah felt abandoned, God was
sustaining a community of faithful hearts.
Elijah’s
exhaustion and fear had narrowed his vision. God’s words opened a wider
horizon. They showed Elijah that his loneliness was not the same as God’s
reality. While Elijah saw only isolation, God saw a hidden community—people
whose faith had been preserved, strengthened, and sustained by His unseen hand.
This truth didn’t just correct Elijah; it comforted him.
It reminded
him that God’s work is never limited to what one person can observe, and that
divine faithfulness often unfolds quietly, away from public view. Instead of carrying the weight of Israel’s
spiritual condition alone, he learned he was part of a much larger story God
was writing.
The unseen
7,000 meant Elijah’s efforts were not in vain, his ministry was not solitary,
and God’s purposes were advancing even when Elijah felt overwhelmed. God is always doing more than we know—working
in hearts, raising up others, and preparing support long before we recognize
it.
In our own
lives, we often echo Elijah’s words. We face seasons where obedience feels
unnoticed, where faithfulness feels lonely, or where progress seems invisible.
It is easy to assume that nothing is happening, that we are carrying burdens
alone, or that our efforts are in vain.
Elijah’s
story reminds us that God is always working behind the scenes, orchestrating
support, preparing people, and shaping outcomes long before they become
visible. What feels like silence is often God’s hidden preparation.
God is
always doing more than we know because His work is not limited to what our eyes
can measure or what our emotions can interpret. While we often focus on what is
visible — the challenges in front of us, the prayers that seem unanswered, the
loneliness we feel in our efforts — God is quietly shaping outcomes in ways we
cannot yet see.
Just as He
preserved 7,000 faithful ones in Elijah’s day, He is still raising up people,
resources, and solutions long before we become aware of them. His activity is
not reactive; it is proactive, intentional, and always ahead of us.
This truth
means that our moments of discouragement are never the full picture. God may
already be aligning support, preparing relationships, or opening doors that
will only become visible at the right time. What feels like silence is often
God’s preparation. What feels like delay is often God’s protection.
What feels
like isolation is often God positioning us for a greater understanding of His
faithfulness. Trusting His unseen work invites us to rest, not in what we can
observe, but in who He is — a God who moves in the background with purpose,
wisdom, and perfect timing.
To trust
God’s unseen work is to rest in the truth that He is never inactive, never
indifferent, and never limited by what we can perceive. It means believing that
He is moving in hearts, aligning circumstances, and sustaining others who walk
the same path of faith. Yes, God is always doing more than we know.
Our
perspective is shaped by our immediate circumstances, but God’s perspective
spans eternity. While we may only notice the surface — the challenges, the
delays, the unanswered prayers — God is moving in the depths, aligning people,
shaping hearts, and preparing outcomes long before they reach our awareness.
His activity
is often hidden, not because He is distant, but because His methods are far
more intricate and far-reaching than our limited vision can grasp. This means
that even in seasons that feel stagnant or silent, God is actively weaving
together details that will one day reveal His wisdom and care.
Just as He
preserved 7,000 faithful ones in Elijah’s time without Elijah knowing, God is
still orchestrating support, opening doors, and raising up people who will play
a role in our story at the right moment. What feels like waiting is often God’s
preparation. What feels like emptiness is often God clearing space for
something new. And what feels like isolation is often God positioning us for
deeper trust.

That is one of the many races we will run.
ReplyDeleteThank you Pastor for the reminder.
ReplyDelete