One wrong step can turn a normal morning into a fight to survive. We start with the true-to-life, gut-level story of Aaron Rawson, alone in a slot canyon in southeastern Utah when an 800-pound boulder pins his arm and leaves him with no plan, little water, and no one expecting him home. It is intense for a reason: many of us know what it feels like when the world drops out from under us in a single moment, whether it is a diagnosis, betrayal, or a crisis that shows up uninvited.
From there, we go straight to the question that surfaces when suffering hits hard and fast: where is God in this? We read Psalm 46 and slow down on the phrase “a very present help in trouble.” That language is not about God being far away and eventually getting around to you. It is about help that is available, abundant, and near right now. The Psalm does not promise that God will always remove the boulder. It does promise that God is in the canyon with you, steady when everything else feels like it is collapsing.
We also talk about what hardship can produce when it strips away distractions: clarity. Sometimes God uses the canyon to quiet every other voice until reliance becomes the only path forward. We close with a challenging distinction between waiting on God and waiting instead of God, and we ask whether you are hoping for rescue from something God intends for you to walk through. If this hit home, subscribe, share this with a friend who is carrying weight, and leave a review that helps more people find The Daily Blade.
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