Rae Bargo

God Is Our Constant in a World of Unraveling and Unknowns

In a world that feels like it is constantly shifting beneath our feet, it is easy to feel unsteady.

Headlines change by the hour. Economies rise and fall. Relationships fracture. Health can decline without warning. Plans unravel. The future, once neatly imagined, becomes clouded with uncertainty. We live in a time where the only predictable thing often seems to be unpredictability.

Technology advances faster than we can adapt. Cultural values shift. Personal expectations collide with harsh realities. Even within our own hearts, emotions can swing from hope to fear in a matter of moments. We crave stability, yet everything around us feels fragile.

And yet, for the believer, there is a profound and anchoring truth: God is our constant in a world of unraveling and unknowns.

This truth is not sentimental optimism. It is not denial of hardship. It is not naïve spirituality that pretends storms do not rage. It is a theological reality rooted in the very nature of who God is.

From Genesis to Revelation, Scripture reveals a God who does not shift with the times, who does not evolve with culture, who does not abandon His purposes when circumstances grow chaotic.

Malachi 3:6 declares, “For I the Lord do not change; therefore you, O children of Jacob, are not consumed.”

In that single verse, we find both comfort and clarity. The reason we are not destroyed by instability is because the One who holds us does not change.

The Unchanging Nature of God

Human beings change. Our perspectives mature. Our feelings fluctuate. Our commitments sometimes weaken. Even our strongest promises can falter under pressure. We are shaped by experience, influenced by emotion, and often driven by fear.

We change careers. We change friendships. We change convictions. We change our minds.

But God is not like us.

Hebrews 13:8 tells us, “Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever.” The same Christ who walked dusty roads in Galilee, who touched lepers without hesitation, who forgave the adulterous woman, who wept at Lazarus’s tomb, who calmed the storm with a word, and who conquered death itself, remains unchanged.

This constancy is not static indifference. It is steadfast faithfulness.

God’s character does not evolve because it is already perfect. His holiness does not fluctuate. His mercy does not run dry. His justice does not weaken. His love does not diminish.

James 1:17 reinforces this truth: “Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of lights, with whom there is no variation or shadow due to change.” There is no shifting shadow in Him. No hidden instability. No sudden reversal of heart. His goodness today is the same goodness He displayed yesterday, and it will remain tomorrow.

In a culture that constantly reinvents itself, we serve a God who does not need reinvention.

When Everything Else Feels Unstable

We often build our sense of security on things that appear solid.

Careers feel stable, until layoffs happen.
Savings accounts feel reassuring, until markets shift.
Relationships feel permanent, until misunderstandings fracture trust.
Health feels dependable, until a diagnosis changes everything.

None of these things are wrong to value. But none of them were ever meant to carry the weight of being our ultimate foundation.

When we anchor our identity in what can be shaken, we will inevitably feel shaken.

Hebrews 12:27 speaks of a time when everything that can be shaken will be shaken. That reality is not meant to terrify us; it is meant to redirect us. It reminds us that only what is eternal will remain.

God alone is unshakable.

When everything else trembles, He does not.

God as Our Refuge in Chaos

The world has always known turmoil. Wars, famines, persecution, natural disasters, political upheaval, personal tragedy, these are not uniquely modern experiences. Scripture is filled with stories of people walking through uncertainty and fear.

Abraham left everything familiar without knowing where he was going.
Joseph was betrayed by his brothers and imprisoned unjustly.
David fled for his life from a king consumed by jealousy.
Esther faced the possibility of death to save her people.
Paul endured shipwrecks, beatings, and imprisonment.

Yet in every generation, God reveals Himself as refuge.

Psalm 46:1–2 proclaims, “God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble. Therefore we will not fear though the earth gives way, though the mountains be moved into the heart of the sea.”

Notice the imagery. The earth giving way. Mountains collapsing into the sea. These are not mild inconveniences. They are catastrophic upheavals.

And still, the psalmist says, “We will not fear.”

Why?

Because refuge is not found in the absence of chaos. Refuge is found in the presence of God.

He is not distant in our trouble. He is our very present help.

Rae Bargo is a writer, encourager, and believer who weaves faith, creativity, and purpose together in her work. She currently serves Gramazin as Operations Manager, partnering with its founder to support project innovation and collaborative brainstorming. Originally from Kentucky, where storytelling is a way of life, Rae believes stories truly matter and that God often works most beautifully through ordinary lives and everyday moments.

Translate »