Crosspoint Church | Georgetown, TX

Habakkuk: When God Seems Silent

Devotions this week based on The Prophets Week 7 – Habakkuk (WATCH HERE)


“How long, Lord, must I call for help, but you do not listen?” — Habakkuk 1:2

 

The opening of Habakkuk is startling in its honesty. Unlike other prophets who speak for God to the people, Habakkuk begins by speaking to God for the people. His heart cries out, “How long, Lord?” It’s the same plea found in the Psalms (Psalm 13:1; 74:10) and echoed by saints throughout history. Habakkuk is burdened not by doubt alone, but by deep faith that expects God to act.

He looks around and sees violence, injustice, and corruption among his own people. It’s not the world’s wickedness that troubles him most, but God’s apparent silence in the face of Judah’s moral decay. “Why do you make me look at injustice? Why do you tolerate wrongdoing?” (1:3). Habakkuk believes in God’s holiness and justice, but he can’t reconcile that belief with what he sees.

God’s answer, however, shocks him even more. “Look at the nations and watch—and be utterly amazed. For I am going to do something in your days that you would not believe” (1:5). The answer? God is raising up the Babylonians, a ruthless, godless empire, to execute judgment on Judah. The prophet asked for justice; he received a judgment he didn’t expect. God’s plan seems worse than the problem.

This is often how faith feels in crisis. We pray for healing, and the sickness deepens. We pray for peace, and conflict intensifies. But God’s silence does not mean absence. His plan often stretches beyond our understanding. As Isaiah 55:8 reminds us, “My thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways.” God’s perspective is eternal, and His justice unfolds on His perfect timetable.

In Job 23:8–10, Job laments that he cannot find God anywhere, but then declares, “When he has tested me, I will come forth as gold.” Habakkuk must learn this same trust: that God is refining His people through the furnace of judgment, preparing a remnant purified by faith.

Even the most faithful struggle with divine silence. Think of Elijah in 1 Kings 19, hiding in the cave, asking to die because he cannot see God’s hand at work. Yet God was there in a whisper, not a windstorm. The same is true for Habakkuk. God’s silence is not indifference; it is often preparation.

Jesus Himself experienced this silence in Gethsemane and on the cross. “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” (Matthew 27:46). Yet from that silence came salvation. God was not absent in the darkness of Calvary—He was working redemption.

So when God seems silent in your life when injustice thrives, prayers seem unanswered, and faith feels futile remember Habakkuk’s first lesson: Faith waits honestly before God. Habakkuk doesn’t hide his frustration. He brings it to God directly. God welcomes that kind of raw, reverent honesty.

Ultimately, God’s silence invites trust, not despair. His delays are not denials; His purpose is redemption. Like Habakkuk, we can rest in this truth: God sees, God knows, and God acts—often in ways beyond what we imagine.

 

Apply: Where is God challenging you to trust, even though it seems he is remaining silent?

 

Prayer: Lord, You see the injustice, pain, and confusion in our world and in our hearts. When You seem silent, help us remember that You are never absent. Teach us to trust Your wisdom even when we cannot see Your hand. Give us patience to wait for Your justice and peace. Refine our faith as You did for Habakkuk, turning our confusion into confidence, our fear into faith. May we live with hope, knowing that Your plans are always good, Your timing always perfect, and Your promises always sure. In Jesus’ name, Amen.

our mission: Grow With Purpose - Go With Passion