A Psalm 139 Devotional for Those Who Feel Unseen
There are seasons when you learn to make yourself smaller.
To anticipate what others need.
To soften what might unsettle them.
To translate your interior world into something acceptable.
You learn how to be understood.
Or at least how to avoid being misunderstood.
Sometimes from love.
Sometimes from survival.
Sometimes from long experience with conditional welcome.
You become fluent in effort.
It becomes almost invisible to you.
It begins to feel like who you are.
And sometimes, you are praised for it.
And forget what it feels like
not to manage yourself.
It keeps you safe.
But it keeps you tired.
Psalm 139 interrupts that pattern quietly.
It speaks directly to those who feel unseen.
After learning to rest without reaching and to trust goodness that follows, this psalm goes deeper still.
“O Lord, You have searched me and known me.”
Not evaluated.
Not measured.
Known.
Before explanation.
Before defense.
Before refinement.
Known.
“You know when I sit and when I rise.”
Before a word is on your tongue,
He knows it completely.
Relief in not having to explain yourself.
Relief in not managing perception.
Relief in being understood before you speak.
“You hem me in, behind and before,
and lay Your hand upon me.”
Hemmed in.
Not confined.
Held.
Behind, where memory lives.
Before, where uncertainty waits.
He is already there,
without waiting for you to arrive differently.
Not waiting for improvement.
Not scanning for failure.
Simply present.
When the Body Stops Bracing
Even darkness is not dark to You.
There are days when your interior feels dim,
when clarity does not come easily.
Nothing about you disappears.
And slowly, something in you softens.
Your shoulders lower a fraction.
Your breath slows.
Your hands remain where they are.
Search me, O God, and know my heart.
This is not fear.
It is trust.
You were formed in secret.
Woven together before witness.
Known before you could introduce yourself.
Your value preceded your usefulness.
And gradually, without announcement,
effort loosens.
You discover you were never unseen.
You were already known.
And nothing needed to be earned.
You were already held.
*****
This reflection belongs to The Theology of Being Held,
a series exploring Scriptures that do not ask anything of us.
If Psalm 131 names the quieting of striving,
and Psalm 23 feels like rest that follows,
Psalm 139 goes deeper still into being known.