There are moments when the world feels unsteady. Not in some distant, abstract way, but right outside our windows and inside our hearts. Storms roll in without asking permission. News arrives heavy and relentless. Plans unravel. Certainty slips through our fingers faster than we expect.
In times like these, fear feels reasonable. Almost logical. The ground shifts, the noise grows louder, and we are tempted to believe we are standing alone in it.
But we are not.
Scripture reminds us that God is not a distant observer, watching from somewhere far removed from our trouble. He is present. Not later. Not eventually. Now. He is a refuge, not because the storm disappears, but because we are not left to face it unprotected.
I think we often misunderstand refuge. We imagine it as escape. A sudden calm where nothing bad can reach us. But real refuge is stronger than that. It is the steady presence that holds when the wind howls. It is peace that does not depend on circumstances behaving themselves.
In my stories, danger rarely arrives quietly. It presses in. It surrounds. It tests what a character truly believes. And in life, we face our own versions of that pressure. The moments when fear whispers worst case scenarios. The nights when sleep comes slowly. The days when strength feels thinner than usual.
This is where faith becomes more than words on a page. It becomes a choice. A decision to trust that even if the earth gives way, even if what felt solid begins to crack, God remains unmoved.
I have learned that calm does not come from controlling the storm. It comes from remembering who stands with us inside it. God does not panic. He does not rush. He does not waver. And when we lean into that truth, something in us steadies as well.
So today, wherever you are and whatever you are facing, know this. You are not unseen. You are not unguarded. You are not abandoned to the chaos. There is refuge available to you, even now.
May you find warmth where the air feels cold. Peace where the noise is loud. And courage to stand, trusting that the One who holds the world also holds you.