His Faithfulness in Trials
That “Somehow” Is God
There is a particular kind of faith that only comes from trials.
Not the faith we read about in books. Not the faith we profess on good days when everything is going well and God feels close and the sun is out and prayer comes easily. But the deeper, quieter, harder-won faith that is forged in the difficult seasons — the ones we did not choose, the ones we would never have asked for, the ones we are not sure we will survive until somehow, one day at a time, we do.
Older adults carry more of this kind of faith than most people know. The faith that has been tested. The faith that has sat at a bedside. The faith that has buried people it loved and kept believing anyway. The faith that has stared at an uncertain diagnosis and whispered, “I do not understand this, but I trust You.” This is not thin faith. This is the thickest, most durable faith there is. And it is built in exactly the places that looked, at the time, like they would destroy it.
Imagine an older gentleman making his way slowly along the garden path outside his care home one morning. The air is cool. The flowers are just beginning to open. He has been going through something hard — a health crisis, a painful transition, a season of loss that has stretched longer than he thought he could bear.
A friend he has not seen in a few weeks happens to be walking the same path. They fall into step together, quietly at first, the way old friends do. After a while his friend asks, with genuine care, how he is getting through it.
He slows his pace for a moment. Looks at the garden around him. And then says, almost to himself:
There is wonder in his voice when he says it. Not performance. Not pretending. Just the genuine astonishment of someone who looked back over the past weeks and realized: I should have collapsed. I did not collapse. Something was holding me up.
That is the moment. That is the testimony. And the answer to the “somehow” is the same answer it has always been, across every hard story in the history of God’s people: His faithfulness.
Isaiah 43:2 was written for exactly this kind of moment. God does not say: you will not face the waters. He does not promise the rivers will not rise, or the fire will not come. He says something both more honest and more comforting than that: when you pass through the waters — not if, but when — I will be with you. When the rivers rise, they will not overwhelm you. When the fire burns, you will not be consumed. Not because the waters are not real. Not because the fire is not hot. But because the One who walks with you through them is greater than both.
His Nearness is His Faithfulness in Trials. God’s faithfulness does not depend on our strength. When we feel weak, He is faithful. When we feel afraid, He is faithful. When we feel uncertain and confused and unable to see even one step ahead — He is faithful. He holds us when the waters rise. He steadies us when the ground feels unstable. And He keeps showing up — morning after morning, one quiet mercy after another — even in the seasons when we are too tired to notice.
The “somehow” is always Him. It was Him in the sleepless nights when you got up and faced the day anyway. It was Him in the hardest appointments, the loneliest hours, the moments when you were sure you had reached the end of yourself. It was Him, quiet and steady and faithful, holding what you could not hold by yourself.
You are not getting through your trial by your own strength. You never were. That is not weakness — that is the truth that makes the testimony. When this season is behind you, the story you will tell is not: I was strong enough. It will be: I did not know how — but somehow I did — and that somehow was God.
Today, let His faithfulness be your anchor. Not your own resilience. Not your own willpower. His. The One who has been faithful to every generation that came before you is faithful to you today — in this trial, in this moment, in this hour.
You are not walking alone. You never have been.
- The next time you are in the middle of something hard and you catch yourself thinking I don’t know how I’m getting through this — stop and remember: the “somehow” is God. Name it. Say it out loud. “This is His faithfulness.” Let that truth become your anchor.
- For the Next Generation: The most powerful testimony is not “I was strong enough.” It is “I was not strong enough — but God was faithful anyway.” Ask an older person in your life: “What is the hardest thing God has ever walked you through?” Their answer will give you more courage for your own trials than almost anything else you will ever hear.
Sit quietly. Think back over a trial you have already come through — a hard season that is now behind you. Notice that you are here. On the other side of it. Still breathing. Still believing.
That was His faithfulness. It brought you through then. It will bring you through now.
Now bring to mind whatever trial you are facing today. Place it gently before Him.
“Lord, I do not know how I will get through this. But I trust that the ‘somehow’ is You.”
Let that be your rest today. He is faithful. He always has been.
through every hard hour,
every uncertain moment,
every rising water.
May His presence calm your fears.
May His strength uphold your spirit.
And may you look back one day —
from the other side of this trial —
and see clearly what is already true right now:
that He has been with you every step of the way,
and never once let you go.



