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Have you ever whispered through tears, “God, where are You?” When your child is no longer walking beside you, the silence can feel deafening. The ache of unanswered questions presses in: Why my child? Why now? Why this way? These questions don’t just come once and disappear—they return at milestones, in the quiet of night, and in the everyday moments you never expected to face without your child.
Friend, if this is where you find yourself today, you’re not alone. And you’re not faithless for asking. Even the pages of Scripture are filled with people who asked God the same questions we wrestle with in grief.
Job, David, Habakkuk—each of them cried out to God with desperate questions. Habakkuk asked, “How long, Lord, must I call for help, but You do not listen?” (Habakkuk 1:2 NLT). Can you hear the ache in his words? They sound so much like ours.
What’s comforting is that God preserved these cries in His Word. They remind us that it’s not sinful or wrong to ask the hard questions. The prophets, the psalmists, and the faithful before us felt the very same silence—and God did not turn away from them.
When God answered Habakkuk, He didn’t give him a neat solution. Instead, He said: “Look among the nations and see—be astounded! For I am doing a work in your days that you would not believe if you were told.” (Habakkuk 1:5).
God reminded Habakkuk—and us—that His work is bigger than we can see. Silence doesn’t mean indifference. Waiting doesn’t mean abandonment. And unanswered questions do not mean unanswered prayers.
David cried, “How long, O Lord? Will You forget me forever?” (Psalm 13:1 NLT). Job argued with God for 37 chapters before God finally spoke. Even Peter reminds us: “The Lord isn’t really being slow about His promise… He is being patient for your sake.” (2 Peter 3:9 NLT).
Our timelines are urgent. God’s timing is purposeful. What feels unbearably slow to us is His mercy at work. His steady hand is holding us, even when our hearts are frantic.
Scripture invites us to “cast all your cares and anxieties on Him, for He cares for you” (1 Peter 5:7 NLT). That word cast means to throw something with force—like casting a fishing net or rod. It’s not a gentle placing; it’s a release.
When you cast your unanswered questions on God, you’re saying, “I can’t carry this anymore, but You can.” The question itself doesn’t disappear—but the weight of trying to solve it on your own shifts into His hands. This is where peace begins to take root, not because the answers come, but because the burden is no longer yours to carry alone.
Friend, unanswered questions don’t mean God has abandoned you. He is still with you, still listening, and still working in ways you may not see yet. You don’t have to erase your questions to have faith—you can bring them to Him, again and again.
He hears your cries. He knows your pain. And He is holding both your questions and your heart in His love.
Hold on to this truth: His silence is not absence.


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