Learning to trust God's direction when the destination remains unseen
Based on Genesis 12, Exodus 13, Hebrews 11
Once we know God is present, a new question rises to meet us.
Not is He here, but where is He leading.
Not will He come, but how do I walk when I cannot yet see where
the path ends.
If Session 1 was about standing still at the water's edge and
trusting that God meets us there, this session is about what happens next. The
moment we lift our eyes from the shoreline and notice the horizon still
waiting. Still calling. Always just out of reach.
This is the shift from presence to orientation.
From certainty to direction.
I. A Horizon Is Not a Destination
Look far enough across any sea and you will find a line where the
water seems to meet the sky.
You can walk toward it for the rest of your life and never arrive.
The horizon is not a destination. It is an orientation, something
that keeps reorienting you, mile after mile, wave after wave.
This is also true of faith.
We tend to think of faith as something we possess once the picture
becomes clear. Once the diagnosis resolves. Once the door opens. Once the
calling is confirmed in writing.
But Scripture rarely works that way. Faith is trusting the
direction long before the destination comes into view.
Life becomes directional. Not predictive.
II. Abraham and the Road with No Map
God's call to Abraham did not come with an itinerary.
"The Lord had said to Abram, 'Go from your country, your
people and your father's household to the land I will show you.'" (Genesis
12:1)
Not the land I have already shown you. Not even the land I will
name for you. Simply: go, and I will show you as you go.
Abraham left Haran with a direction, not a destination. He did not
know the terrain, the distance, or the shape of the land at the end of the
road. What he had was a voice worth following and a horizon worth walking
toward.
We often imagine that uncertainty is evidence we have somehow
missed God. Scripture suggests almost the opposite.
The greatest journeys in the Bible begin with incomplete vision.
Abraham. Moses. David. Mary. Paul. None of them knew what chapter five looked
like while they were living chapter one.
Faith has never depended upon seeing the ending. Only trusting the
One who already has.
III. The Pillar That Led by Night
Israel did not leave Egypt with a fixed route.
"By day the Lord went ahead of them in a pillar of cloud to
guide them on their way and by night in a pillar of fire to give them
light." (Exodus 13:21)
Notice what the pillar did not do. It did not show them the
destination from a distance. It did not lay out the forty years in advance. It
simply went ahead of them, one day and one night at a time, giving them only as
much direction as the next stretch of desert required.
This is not the guidance most of us ask for. We want the whole
map. We want to know, before we take a single step, exactly where the steps
will lead. We want the wilderness explained before we're willing to enter it.
God tends to give the next step. Just the next one.
Enough cloud for today. Enough fire for tonight. Never the whole
journey laid bare at once, no matter how long we stand at the edge of the camp
and ask for it.
Israel's faith was never measured by how much they could see
ahead. It was measured by whether they were willing to strike the tents and
keep walking toward wherever the pillar led — even into a wilderness with no
landmarks of its own.
IV. The Assurance of Things Not Seen
The writer of Hebrews offers the clearest definition of faith in
all of Scripture. And it has almost nothing to do with certainty.
"Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance
about what we do not see." (Hebrews 11:1)
Read that again, slowly.
Not proof. Not a finished picture. Assurance: the quiet, settled
kind that lets you keep walking toward a horizon you cannot yet describe in any
detail at all.
The chapter goes on to describe a whole company of people who
lived this way. Noah building before the rain. Abraham setting out not knowing
where he was going. Moses choosing the harder road because he was looking ahead
to a reward he could not yet see.
These were not people with special access to the future. They were
ordinary people who trusted a voice more than they trusted their own sight.
None of them had the destination in view. All of them had a direction they
trusted enough to follow.
Søren Kierkegaard once observed, "Life can only be understood
backwards; but it must be lived forwards."
Faith is the willingness to live forward without the benefit of
hindsight.
V. What the Horizon Teaches Us
A second pattern begins to emerge, alongside the one we noticed at
the shoreline.
God rarely gives the whole road at once because the journey is not
merely taking us somewhere. It is making us someone.
If God had handed Abraham the entire itinerary before he left
Haran, Abraham would still have arrived in Canaan. But he would not have become
Abraham along the way. The years of walking, waiting, and not-yet-knowing were
not delays before the promise. They were the shape the promise took.
Why gradual? Why not simply hand Abraham the whole itinerary and
spare him the not-knowing?
Because if God showed us the whole journey at the beginning, we
would spend our lives trying to control it rather than trust Him through it. We
would prepare for every future chapter instead of receiving today's grace. The
hiddenness of the road is not simply a limitation of our knowledge. It is one
of God's instruments of formation. Every undisclosed mile invites a dependence
that certainty never could.
Formation requires gradual revelation. He gives a horizon. Enough
light for the next stretch. Enough direction for the next step. Enough of
Himself to keep us moving without ever handing over the full map.
Faith, all through Scripture, looks less like certainty about the
future and more like trust in the God who keeps calling us toward it.
We were not built to see the whole horizon. We were built to walk
toward it.
VI. Standing at Your Horizon
Somewhere out past today, there is a horizon calling you.
Maybe it is a decision you cannot yet make with full confidence.
Maybe it is a calling you sense but cannot fully name. Maybe it is simply
tomorrow, and the uncertainty of what it holds.
Scripture does not ask you to see it clearly before you trust it.
It asks you to walk toward it the way Abraham did, the way Israel did in the
wilderness: one day's light at a time, one step of direction rather than a
lifetime of prediction.
Peter understood this better than anyone, if only for a moment.
Standing in the boat, he could see Jesus out on the water but not the ground
beneath his own feet. He had enough revelation for one step. Not enough for
certainty about the next. And for as long as he kept his eyes on the horizon
rather than the depth below it, that was enough.
The horizon will keep moving as you walk toward it. Not because
God delights in keeping you uncertain, but because every faithful step unfolds
a horizon that could never have been seen from where you began.
Horizons do not retreat. They unfold not as punishment for
imperfect sight, but as evidence you are moving, becoming, being led somewhere
real.
And so, before you go, receive this as a blessing rather than a
fourth movement:
"Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your
own understanding; in all your ways submit to him, and he will make your paths
straight." (Proverbs 3:5-6)
Not reveal your whole path. Make it straight. One step at a time.
Practicing the Presence of God at the Horizon This Week
- Name
your horizon. What is calling you forward that you
cannot yet fully see? Write it down without demanding it come into focus.
- Ask
for today's light, not tomorrow's map. Instead of praying for the whole
plan, ask God for what the next step requires.
- Trace
the pattern backward. Look at a horizon you once walked toward
blindly. Notice, now, how the direction made sense in hindsight even when
it didn't at the time.
- Release
the need to predict. Where have you been withholding a step
because you cannot see the ending? Ask what it would mean to move anyway.
- Walk today's stretch. Choose one honest, faithful action this week that moves you toward the horizon, even without full clarity about what lies beyond it.
Continue Walking the Shoreline
If today's reflection encouraged you, you may also enjoy:
- The Place In Between Where Life Still Meets You
- The Fifth Season: When Closure Never Comes But Clarity Does
- Before Resurrection Was Recognized
The Shoreline Series: Faith at the Edge is a weekly devotional
exploring the places where God meets us between endings and beginnings,
certainty and mystery, grief and hope.