When God Is Silent: Trusting in the Wait
One of the most challenging aspects of the Christian walk is learning how to sit in silenceโnot your own silence, but Godโs. Weโre so quick to equate His silence with absence. I just sat through a thirteen-month season of waiting, and it was hard, not because I didnโt believe God was good, but because He seemedโฆ silent.
But something I began to realize halfway through was this: What if His quietness isnโt a sign that somethingโs wrongโฆ but that something is right?
When God Is Silent, Itโs Easy to Feel Lost
When God is silent, it can feel like weโve taken a wrong turn. We start asking questions like:
Did I miss His will?
Am I being punished?
Why am I not hearing anything?
Where are you, God?
Donโt get me wrongโthose questions are completely valid. They’re human. After all, when someone goes quiet in real life, we assume weโve done something wrong. We read the silence as rejection or offense. So it makes sense that we might project those same feelings onto God. If weโre not hearing from Him, we assume He must be disappointed or distantโmaybe even giving us the silent treatment.
But hereโs the truth: God is not petty, and He doesnโt treat us the way we treat each other.
He is a good Fatherโloving, merciful, patient, and rich in compassion. Heโs not avoiding you. He hasnโt withdrawn. Heโs not punishing you through silence.
In fact, Godโs silence is not an indicator of His absence.
Iโve learned that more often than not, it’s a sign that you’re exactly where He wants you to be.
Trust the Way He Leads
God guides and leads those who seek Him (Psalm 32:8, Proverbs 3:5โ6). He doesnโt play games. If youโve been praying, seeking, and taking faithful steps forward, then you can rest. His silence doesnโt mean you’re doing the wrong thingโit means He wants you to trust that Heโs already at work. It means He wants you to trust that if He wanted you doing something else, He’d let you know!
Waiting Grows Faith
God is usually silent in seasons of waiting because Heโs more interested in building trust than giving us constant updates. Think about Joseph. God gave him dreams as a teenagerโฆ and then, silence. Joseph was betrayed by his brothers, sold into slavery, promoted in Potipharโs house, falsely accused, and thrown into prison. And yet, he waited for years.
During that long silence, God was orchestrating not just Josephโs redemption, but the rescue of entire nations. If Joseph had judged Godโs presence by the “volume of His voice”, he mightโve given up.
Instead, he remained faithful. You are walking by faith, not by sight, not by feelings, not by constant confirmations. And that kind of trust? Thatโs what pleases Him most (Hebrews 11:6).
The Glory in Not Knowing
Proverbs 25:2 says:
โIt is the glory of God to conceal a matter; to search out a matter is the glory of kings.โ
We want answers. We want to uncover the plan. But God gets glory when we seek Him more than we seek explanations. When we trust instead of demand. When we wait without trying to control the outcome.
And even more than getting the answers, there is comfort in remembering this:
God knows all. God sees all.
He is not guessing or figuring it out as He goes. He is shaping us, building our faith, and drawing us into deeper dependence on Him.
A Quick but Important Clarification
Now, if you know youโre doing something you shouldnโt be doing, this message isnโt meant to excuse that. Godโs silence in the face of unrepentant sin is a different matter entirely. Scripture is clear that unconfessed sin can hinder our fellowship with Him (Isaiah 59:2, Psalm 66:18). If your heart is convicted, respond in repentance and humilityโHe is faithful to forgive and restore.
But this encouragement is for the one who is walking in truth. For the one who is earnestly seeking God, confessing sin, pursuing obedience, and still not hearing anything.
This silence is not rejection. Itโs a sacred invitation to trust.
A Word From Personal Experience
I trust that God is faithful to reveal when Iโm walking outside of His will. So when I ask, โLord, whatโs going on?โ and He doesnโt answer, Iโve come to consider two possibilities:
- Do what seems best.
I have the Holy Spirit. Sometimes I just need to take the next faithful step, like when Nathan told David to go ahead and build the house of the Lord. Later, God redirected David and revealed it would be Solomon who would build it. God was faithful to guide. Heโll be faithful to guide you, too, even if you start with the “wrong” plans. - Talk to Him about other things.
Maybe you feel like youโre not hearing from God because you keep bringing up something Heโs already asked you to trust Him with. He might not have anything more to say about it right now. So talk to Him about other things. Grow in knowledge, pray for others, and worship. Donโt obsess over the one thing youโre waiting for! Honor Him in the waiting.
In Closing: Be Encouraged
If you’re in a season of silence, I hope this is an encouragement.
You are not forgotten.
You are not off-course.
You are not being punished.
You are simply being invited to trust the One who sees the end from the beginning.
Keep walking.
Keep seeking.
Keep trusting.
His silence is sacred. And He speaks volumes through it.
Are you in a season of silence? Iโd love to hear from you.

