When God Whispers: Being Still and Trusting in a Restless World

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Thereโ€™s something about being still that feels counterintuitive in a world so wired for hustle. For scrolling. For proving, fixing, and striving. And yet, stillnessโ€”real stillnessโ€”is often where God does His deepest work.

This has been more than a concept for me latelyโ€”itโ€™s been a personal mandate. A season where doors have closed, answers have paused, and the invitation is simply: Be still. Trust Me.

If youโ€™ve ever felt like youโ€™re waiting on God, or like youโ€™re in a holding pattern you didnโ€™t sign up for, youโ€™re not alone. And more importantly, youโ€™re not forgotten.

When the Noise Feels Safer Than the Silence

In society these days being busy is worn like a badge of honor. Our phones keep us company, our calendars validate our worth, and distraction often masquerades as peace. But what if the noise is numbing us to the healing God wants to do?

Stillness isnโ€™t passiveโ€”itโ€™s powerful. In Exodus 14:14, God says, “The Lord will fight for you; you need only to be still.โ€ Stillness can be obedience. It can be surrender. And sometimes, it can be the bravest thing you do.

a man kneeling praying in front of a small chair with a bible

Iโ€™ve felt God pressing me into stillness recently. Not because Iโ€™ve mastered peace, but because Iโ€™m prone to idolize motion. Even good thingsโ€”ministry, service, goalsโ€”can become idols if they replace our quiet trust in God. Being still reminds me that I am not in control, and thatโ€™s actually good news.

When Being Still Feels Like Doing Nothing

If youโ€™re like me, youโ€™ve probably equated being still with being unproductive. But the spiritual life doesnโ€™t measure success in output. It measures in obedience. In intimacy. In faith.

Psalm 46:10 doesnโ€™t say, “Be still and figure it all out.โ€ It says, “Be still, and know that I am God.โ€ Stillness isnโ€™t a voidโ€”itโ€™s an invitation. To know. To remember. To realign with whatโ€™s true.

In todayโ€™s world, thatโ€™s radical. Weโ€™ve been taught to brand ourselves, to share every thought, to build our platforms. But what if our first calling isnโ€™t to produce something for Godโ€”but to be with Him?

Stillness doesnโ€™t always mean inactivity. It might look like:

  • Taking a Sabbath from social media.
  • Going for a walk without your phone.
  • Choosing prayer over panic.
  • Sitting in the Word instead of searching for someone elseโ€™s answers.

These small acts are seeds of trust. And they grow fruit we canโ€™t always see right away.

a woman and a man one indoors 1 outdoors being still with God individually

When Stillness Becomes Sacred

Thereโ€™s a sacredness to silence that canโ€™t be explained, only experienced. When we slow down, we often find that God was never far away. He was always nearโ€”but our souls were too loud to hear Him.

In 1 Kings 19, Elijah didnโ€™t hear God in the wind, the earthquake, or the fireโ€”but in a still, small voice. The whisper was where the wonder was.

And maybe thatโ€™s where youโ€™ll find Him tooโ€”in the stillness of a quiet morning, in the pause between emails, in the tears you cry when no one else sees. He is there.

Letting Go of the Idol of Control

One of the hardest things about trusting God is letting go of our illusion of control. When life feels uncertain, we grasp for clarity. We try to make sense of timelines, expectations, and outcomes. But sometimes, God lovingly blocks our strivingโ€”not to punish us, but to protect us.

Iโ€™ve come to believe that God is less interested in my comfort and more interested in my character. And sometimes, stillness is how He shapes it.

Could it be that this season of stillnessโ€”this period of waiting or quiet or not knowingโ€”is actually a divine invitation? A reset? A re-rooting in whatโ€™s eternal?

What Stillness Reveals

Being still reveals the things weโ€™ve been covering up with activity. The grief we havenโ€™t processed. The fear weโ€™ve buried. The dreams weโ€™re afraid to say out loud.

And thatโ€™s okay.

woman sitting on the ground in nature cross legged

Stillness is where God can begin to do surgery on our souls. Itโ€™s where He binds up the wounds and speaks peace over our panic. Itโ€™s where we learn again that His presence is enough.

Heโ€™s not asking you to have it all figured out. Heโ€™s not disappointed in your doubts. Heโ€™s not afraid of your questions.

Heโ€™s simply saying: Come. Be still. Let Me hold what youโ€™ve been trying to carry.

When Youโ€™re Tired of Being Strong

If youโ€™re wearyโ€”mentally, emotionally, spirituallyโ€”you donโ€™t need another motivational quote. You need rest. You need healing. You need Jesus.

And He offers it. In Matthew 11:28-29, He says, โ€œCome to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me… and you will find rest for your souls.โ€

This kind of rest doesnโ€™t come from a vacation. It comes from surrender.

So, if youโ€™re in a season of pauseโ€ฆ if youโ€™re being asked to wait, to trust, to do lessโ€ฆ youโ€™re not behind. Youโ€™re not lazy. Youโ€™re being invited into a holy rest that will renew you from the inside out.

Let go of the pressure. Let go of the timelines. Let go of the guilt.

And be still.

Because in the stillness, youโ€™ll find Him waiting.

And that changes everything.


If this resonates with you, share it with someone else who might be in a similar season.

And let me gently remind you: God sees you. Heโ€™s working even when youโ€™re resting. Especially then.

May this be your permission slip to slow down, breathe deep, and trust the One who holds it all.

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