If I fully trusted that God was leading me, what would I stop trying to control, prove, or figure out right now?
I believe right now I'm standing at threshold. I am discovering rooms, meeting people, entering new seasons, but often wanting more information before I allow myself to relax.
Looking at to question of trusting God and the results or impact it could have. First thing that comes to mind is this feels too hard to answer. I keep thinking on it and I don't know if I fully trust God, heartbreaking to say. I don't know what that looks like to fully Trust him.
Sometimes people say that I need to give it to Him and things will get better, but I try and I don't know how to actually do it. I'll ask Him to take it but I think I still keep trying to take the reins back. I don't know how to do this in real life and not theory.
If I could give up control and trust Him, which comes first? Trusting Him to help me give up control, giving up control to help me trust Him? Is it's simultaneous? Which came first, the chicken or the egg? I don't even know but I definitely would like to stop trying to prove my worth to other people. I know He sets my worth but I don't know how to take that from concept, or knowing it to be fact and actually implementing it.
Now thinking on how I answered that if I really did. What stands out to me is that I didn't actually answer my question with "I'd stop worrying about my job" or "I'd stop worrying about finding a husband."
You answered it with: "I would stop trying to prove my worth to other people."
I think that's important.
In my reflections and in my dreams I often find I carry a lot of responsibility. And underneath that responsibility is a quiet question of "Am I valuable if I don't fix it?"
Which honestly is a harder question.
As for trusting God, maybe trust doesn't start with "letting go."
People say that all the time but it's vague.
If I had to guess I would say trust starts much smaller.
Maybe instead of "God I give you my whole entire future." Maybe it's "God, I don't know if this job is right. But I'm going to do today's work faithfully and trust You with the outcome."
Instead of, "God, I trust you completely" it looks like "God, I don't know how to trust You completely. Please teach me."
That's still trust.
You don't generally do well learning to swim by just being tossed into the ocean. They learn by putting one foot into the water.
And a lot of my reflection and dreams, I also find I'm searching for things and people.
But over and over, I normally find that what I'm looking for was already nearby.
The room exists. The people are already there. The future husband appears. The crowd is full of familiar faces.
I wonder if part of the lesson isn't: "Stop trying so hard to earn what God is trying to show you."
Because worth is strange. You can prove competence. You can prove intelligence. You can prove usefulness. But worth isn't proved. Worth is received. And I think that's why the question feels so difficult.
I know the theology. I already know God values me. The struggle isn't understanding it. The struggle is believing that I am still valuable on a day when I get frustrated, the job is hard, I feel lonely, I want connection but it's not there, or even when I don't have an answer.
I need to believe that I am loved even when I'm not being useful.
So maybe the next question isn't "how do I trust God more?" but rather, "Who would you be if you stopped treating your usefulness as proof of your worth?"








