When Faith Covers the Fear

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Psalm 23:4 — Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for you are with me; your rod and your staff, they comfort me.

Have you ever been through a tornado? I’ve sat in a bathtub with a mattress over my head, heart pounding, dog shaking, and cat wide-eyed. I’ve heard the warnings. I’ve felt the fear. But this story—this one is different.

It was an ordinary day in Oklahoma until the sky turned dark and the tornado sirens began to wail. A first-grade teacher had seconds to react.

She gathered her class and rushed them into the only interior room they could reach—a tiny bathroom with no windows. The building trembled. The lights flickered. The air itself seemed to groan. She crouched low and pulled the children close, covering them with her own body, doing the only thing she could think to do.

And she prayed.

Not silently. Not politely. She prayed out loud until her voice turned rough and thin. She kept speaking the old shepherd’s song, the one about green pastures and still waters. And when her words reached the dark part—the valley part—she didn’t skip it.

She spoke of walking straight through the deepest shadow without surrendering to fear, because even there the Shepherd does not leave His own, and no evil gets the final word.

She just kept saying it. Over and over.

When the storm finally moved on, the classroom was gone. The roof had been torn away like the lid off a shoebox. Walls collapsed. Papers were scattered for blocks. But every child in her care walked out unharmed.

Later she said, “I couldn’t calm the storm, but the Lord helped me calm their hearts.”

And I can’t stop thinking about that.

Because sometimes faith doesn’t look like stopping the wind. Sometimes it looks like standing in a shaking room and refusing to let terror move you. Sometimes it looks like one steady voice in the dark, reminding everyone that we are not alone.

There are valleys we all walk through—diagnoses, prodigal children, layoffs. Storms that do not ask permission before they arrive.

But what if in the storm we become the steady presence for someone else. What if we speak hope when our own knees are knocking.

Because the world will shake. It just will. But the greatest ministry sometimes is simply standing in the gap, holding on to God for the sake of others when the world literally feels like it’s falling apart.

 


A MOMENT TO REFLECT

  • What “valley” are you walking through right now, and how has it been affecting your faith or emotions?
  • When fear rises, what helps remind you that God is still with you in the middle of it?
  • Have you ever experienced peace or comfort in a difficult moment that didn’t make sense? What did that teach you about God’s presence?
  • Who in your life might need a steady, faith-filled voice right now—and how could you be that for them this week?
  • What would it look like for you to trust God’s presence today, even if your circumstances don’t change?