
Most of us carry at least one question we wish God would answer. Why did this happen? Why didn’t that prayer come true? Why now? Why not yet? This Sabbath story reminds us that faith does not always grow through explanations. Sometimes it grows through trust.
By Raffy Castillo
For nearly three years, Samuel carried a single question. He rarely spoke it aloud. But it followed him everywhere. Into morning prayers. Into long drives. Into sleepless nights.
Whenever life grew quiet, the question returned. “Why did this happen?”
Not with anger. Not even bitterness. Just a deep longing to understand.
The Search for an Explanation
Samuel had examined every angle. He replayed conversations. Reviewed decisions. Analyzed circumstances. Perhaps he had missed something. Perhaps there was a lesson hidden somewhere inside the pain. Perhaps if he understood the reason, the wound would finally heal.
But understanding remained elusive. The question stayed. And so did the ache.
The Unfinished Conversation
The hardest part was not the loss itself. It was the absence of explanation. Had God answered, Samuel believed he could move forward. But heaven remained strangely quiet.
Not silent in every way. Just silent on this particular question. And because of that, a small part of him remained standing at an old crossroads, waiting for an answer that never seemed to arrive.
The Sabbath Afternoon
That Sabbath, Samuel sat alone on a bench overlooking a small lake. The water moved gently beneath the afternoon sun. Nearby, children fed pieces of bread to ducks. An elderly man sat reading a Bible beneath a tree. Nothing remarkable happened.
No revelation. No sudden insight. Just stillness.
What He Finally Noticed
As Samuel watched the ripples spreading across the water, a quiet realization surfaced. For years, he had believed that peace would arrive after understanding. But what if peace was not waiting on the other side of an answer? What if peace was waiting on the other side of surrender?
The thought lingered. And for the first time, he stopped demanding an explanation.
What God Had Been Giving Him All Along
Looking back, Samuel suddenly saw something he had overlooked. God had not answered his question. But He had sustained him through every season. He had sent people at the right moments. Provided strength on difficult days. Opened doors he never expected. Given comfort when words failed.
The answer had not arrived. But grace had. Again and again.
The Freedom of Releasing the Question
As the afternoon shadows lengthened, Samuel whispered a prayer he had never prayed before:
“Lord, if I never understand, help me trust You anyway.”
The words felt simple. Yet somehow, they carried more freedom than years of searching.
What He Wrote Before Sunset
That evening, before the Sabbath ended, Samuel opened his journal and wrote:
“Today, I stopped asking why and started thanking God for being with me while I wondered.”
Then he closed the notebook. And for the first time in a very long while, the question no longer felt heavy.
Sabbath Reflection
The Sabbath reminds us that God is not obligated to explain everything. Some questions remain unanswered. Some mysteries remain mysteries. But His love remains constant. His presence remains faithful. And His goodness remains unchanged.
This Saturday, June 27, may you release the questions that have exhausted your heart.
May you trust the character of God when you cannot trace His reasons.
May you discover that faith is not always knowing why.
Sometimes faith is simply knowing Who.
And may the Sabbath gently remind you
that even when explanations are absent,
God is not.
Closing Prayer
Lord, there are questions I still carry. Things I do not understand. Doors that closed without explanation. Pain that still feels unfinished. Teach me to trust You beyond my understanding. Help me rest in Your goodness, even when answers do not come. And remind me that Your presence is greater than my questions. Amen.
“The answer never came—but peace did.”
Leave a Reply