Unshaken: Trusting in God’s Stability When the World Feels Like It’s Falling Apart
We are living in a time when the ground beneath our feet often feels like it’s shifting. The news changes by the hour. Things we thought were secure suddenly feel fragile. Plans unravel, relationships strain, and the future doesn’t always look the way we hoped it would. It doesn’t take much for our hearts to start asking the same quiet question, What can I really count on?
Scripture brings us back, again and again, to a simple and life-giving answer: while everything around us may tremble, God never does.
Psalm 102:25–27 says:
“In the beginning You laid the foundations of the earth,
and the heavens are the work of Your hands.
They will perish, but You remain…
But You remain the same, and Your years will never end.”
This is not just a comforting idea for difficult days. It is the steady, unchanging reality of who He is. And when we begin to live from that truth, it changes the way we walk through an unstable world.
God Is Not Shaken by What Shakes Us
One of the most comforting things we learn as we grow in faith is that God is never thrown off balance. He is not reacting to world events, scrambling to come up with a new plan, or wondering how things are going to turn out. He is not anxious about tomorrow, and He is not surprised by what feels overwhelming to us today.
The psalmist reminds us that the One who laid the foundations of the earth remains the same even when creation itself wears out. That means the God we are trusting today is the same God who has always been faithful, and He will still be faithful long after everything we see has passed away.
We often measure God’s nearness by how calm our lives feel. But the truth is, His steadiness has never depended on our circumstances. When our lives feel uncertain, it is not a sign that God has become less dependable. It is an invitation to remember that His consistency is deeper than anything we are walking through.
The Illusion of Human Stability
Much of our anxiety comes from the places where we have quietly tried to build our sense of security. We tell ourselves that if we can just get the right job, maintain the right savings, keep our relationships healthy, and make wise enough plans, then we will finally feel settled.
But life has a way of reminding us that none of those things were ever meant to carry the full weight of our peace.
These are good gifts from God, and we can receive them with gratitude. But they were never designed to be our foundation. When we ask them to hold us together, we end up feeling afraid every time one of them shifts.
Jesus’ picture of building on the rock instead of the sand becomes very personal when life gets hard. Sand looks fine on a calm day. It even feels solid for a while. But when the storm comes, the difference between what is temporary and what is eternal becomes impossible to ignore.
God does not offer Himself as an addition to the structures we are already leaning on. He lovingly invites us to discover that He is the only foundation that does not move.
God’s Character Is the Foundation of Our Trust
Trusting God is not about trying to convince ourselves that everything will work out the way we want it to. It grows as we come to know who He actually is.
He is sovereign, which means nothing in our lives is outside His awareness or His authority. Even when situations feel chaotic to us, they are not chaotic to Him. He is not watching from a distance, hoping for the best. He is actively, lovingly reigning.
He is faithful. Every promise He has made is still intact. Scripture shows us a long history of people who had to wait, who walked through confusion, and who experienced hardship, yet discovered that God never failed them.
He is good. This can be the hardest truth to hold onto when life hurts, but the cross is the permanent proof that God’s heart toward us is love. His goodness is not measured by how comfortable we are in a given moment, but by His willingness to give Himself fully for our redemption.
And He is present. Not in a distant, symbolic way, but in the deeply personal way of a Father who walks with His children. We are not holding onto Him by our own strength. We are being held by Him.
Peace Is Found in God’s Unchanging Nature
The peace God offers is very different from the kind the world talks about. It is not the result of everything going smoothly. It is the result of anchoring our minds in the truth of who He is.
There is a steadiness that begins to grow in us when we turn our thoughts back to Him, again and again. It does not mean we never feel grief or confusion. It does not mean we have no questions. It means that underneath all of that, there is a quiet confidence that God is still God, and He is still with us.
This kind of peace cannot be manufactured by positive thinking. It is the fruit of trust, and trust is built through relationship.
Trust Is a Daily Choice
Trusting God is not a one-time decision we made years ago. It is something we practice in the middle of ordinary days and unexpected challenges.
It looks like turning to Him in prayer when we don’t have answers instead of trying to figure everything out on our own. It looks like worshiping when our hearts feel heavy and choosing to believe that He is worthy even when our emotions lag behind. It looks like taking the next step of obedience when the future feels unclear and allowing ourselves to rest when we feel the pressure to control outcomes.
Each of these moments may seem small, but together they shape a life that is rooted in Him.
Isaiah 26:3 says:
“You will keep in perfect peace those whose minds are steadfast, because they trust in You.”
When the World Is Loud, God Is Still
We live in a time when there is always another voice demanding our attention, another update to process, another reason to feel unsettled. It is very easy for our inner lives to start matching that noise.
But God is not found in the rush of it all. He is the steady presence that calls us to be still and remember who He is.
In Psalm 46 the psalmist paints a powerful picture:
“God is our refuge and strength, an ever-present help in trouble.
Therefore we will not fear, though the earth give way…”
The writer does not deny that the earth may give way or that mountains may fall into the sea. It simply declares that even if those things happen, God is still our refuge and strength. Stillness, in this sense, is not about withdrawing from life. It is about returning our focus to the One who does not change.
Stability Does Not Mean the Absence of Storms
We sometimes assume that if we are truly trusting God, our lives will become calmer and more predictable. Yet the disciples found themselves in a violent storm while they were following Jesus.
The waves were real. The fear was real. But Jesus was in the boat.
That is the picture we come back to. His presence does not always remove the storm immediately, but it completely changes our understanding of it. We are never in a situation that is out of His reach or beyond His care.
Our Hope Is Not in a Stable World, but in an Unshakable Kingdom
One of the most freeing realizations in the Christian life is that our ultimate security was never meant to come from this world. Scripture tells us that everything that can be shaken will be shaken, and that can sound unsettling until we remember why.
It is so that what cannot be shaken will remain.
We belong to an unshakable kingdom. Our identity in Christ is secure. Our future with Him is secure. The inheritance He has promised us is secure. When we begin to live from that reality, the instability around us loses its power to define us.
In very practical terms, this means we keep coming back to God’s Word, allowing it to steady our perspective when our thoughts start to spiral. We learn to pray with honesty, bringing Him not only our polished faith but also our fears and questions. We choose to worship in the middle of uncertainty because it lifts our eyes from our problems to His greatness. We remember the ways He has carried us in the past and let those memories strengthen our present trust. And little by little, we loosen our grip on the things we were never meant to control, placing them back into His hands.
Our stability is not ultimately found in a concept or a plan. It is found in Jesus. He is the Rock, the Cornerstone, the One who is the same yesterday, today, and forever.
He stepped into a broken and unstable world and did not avoid suffering. He walked through it, redeemed it, and rose from it. The resurrection is the unchanging declaration that nothing in this world has the power to undo the purposes of God.
When Your Personal World Is Falling Apart
It is one thing to talk about all of this in general terms. It is another when the instability is deeply personal, when a diagnosis changes everything, when a relationship ends, when a door closes, or when a prayer seems to go unanswered.
In those moments, trust can feel less like a confident statement and more like a fragile reaching.
This is where we remember that faith is not measured by how strong we feel. It is measured by where we turn. We can come to Him with trembling hands and still be standing on a solid foundation, because the strength of our hope is not in us, but in Him.
God’s stability is not just something to understand. It is something to rest in.
It is the freedom to stop trying to hold your life together by sheer effort. It is the quiet confidence that you do not have to find permanent security in temporary things. It is the daily returning of your heart to the One who does not change.
The world may continue to shake. Your circumstances may still feel uncertain. Your emotions may rise and fall. But God remains, and because He remains, you can breathe, you can hope, and you can stand.
An Encouragement from Gramazin
You are not walking through these days by accident. God knew exactly when you would live, and He knew what this season of history would hold. The instability around you is not a sign that He has lost control. It is an opportunity to know His unchanging nature more deeply.
He is still on the throne.
He is still faithful.
He is still good.
He is still with you.
And He always will be.


