Be Still in the Shaking
Psalm 46 is not written from a place of ease. It is not the song of someone sitting safely on a quiet afternoon with nothing to fear. It is a psalm born in trouble. The earth is moving, the mountains are shaking, the waters are roaring, and the nations are raging. Yet right in the middle of all that chaos, the psalmist begins with a declaration: “God is our refuge and strength.” He does not say, “God might become our refuge if things get better.” He says God is our refuge. That is faith speaking truth before the feelings catch up.
There are times in life when everything feels unstable. The news is troubling. The future is uncertain. Family burdens are heavy. Health concerns press upon the heart. The things we once leaned on can feel like mountains being carried into the sea. But Psalm 46 reminds us that when everything around us is moving, God is not. He is not shaken by what shakes us. He is not surprised by what frightens us. He is not far away in the storm. He is “a very present help in trouble.”
Then comes that powerful command: “Be still, and know that I am God.” That does not mean we pretend there is no trouble. It does not mean we stop caring, stop praying, or stop doing what is right. It means we stop trying to carry what only God can carry. We loosen our grip on outcomes we cannot control. We remember that God is God, and we are not. Stillness is not weakness. In the life of faith, stillness may be one of the hardest acts of obedience, because it requires trust when everything in us wants to panic.
Maybe today you are standing in a place where the waters are roaring. Maybe your heart feels restless, your mind feels tired, and your soul feels worn down from trying to figure everything out. Psalm 46 invites you to pause and remember two unchanging truths: the Lord of hosts is with you, and the God of Jacob is your refuge. He is the God of the strong and the weak, the steady and the struggling, the faithful and the limping. He is not your refuge because you have held everything together. He is your refuge because He has promised to be.
So be still today. Not because the storm is small, but because your God is great. Not because you understand every detail, but because He does. Not because you feel strong, but because He is your strength. The mountains may shake, the waters may roar, and the nations may rage, but the final word over your life is not chaos. The final word is God’s presence: “The LORD of hosts is with us; the God of Jacob is our refuge.”
Take a few quiet moments today and name before the Lord the thing you have been trying to control. Then pray, “Lord, You are God, and I am not. Help me to be still and trust You.”
"The fear of man bringeth a snare: But whoso putteth his trust in the LORD shall be safe." — Proverbs 29:25
Daily Scripture Reading
Join us as we read through the Bible in one year, growing together in God’s Word day by day. Click on any underlined verse to access Pastor Burns’ helpful study notes and deeper insights.
Psalm 61-62
(Psalm 62)
Psalm 65
John 13:21-38
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This Week's Radio Program
Week Eighteen • May 3, 2026
Trusting God With Tomorrow (Pt. 3)
In this final part of the message, “Trusting God with Tomorrow,” we are brought face to face with a powerful truth from Scripture—while we often plan our days and assume the future, the Bible teaches us that life is fragile, uncertain, and completely in God’s hands. As James reminds us, our life is “even a vapour” that appears for a little time and then vanishes away . The issue is not planning, but planning without God—living as though we are in control of what only God knows.
This message walks through the heart of biblical trust: having a proper perspective of tomorrow, a humble posture before God today, and a surrendered plan that says, “If the Lord will.” Whether facing uncertainty, fear, or the illusion of control, we are called to draw near to God, rest in His care, and trust that His will is good, even when tomorrow is unknown. Because Christ has risen, our future is secure—not in our plans, but in His perfect hands.