There are moments in life when everything feels like it’s moving too fast, and the only instinct you have is to run. Not always physically, but internally, emotionally, spiritually. You try to outpace the pain, outdistance the past, and somehow survive what feels unbearable. If you’re honest, it doesn’t always feel like strength. Sometimes it just feels like survival mode.
I want to walk you through a story, not just mine, but one that stretches across generations. It’s a story marked by trauma, yes, but also by something deeper. God’s hand, steady and persistent, even when no one seemed to be looking for Him.
When Running Feels Like the Only Option
There’s something about trauma that convinces you running is your only chance. You don’t sit down and plan it, it just happens. Your instincts take over. You avoid, you suppress, you push forward, hoping that if you just keep moving, the pain won’t catch up.
My family knew that kind of running. Not metaphorically at first, but literally. Fleeing for their lives, escaping war, uncertainty, and danger. In those moments, there’s no time to process. You just go. And sometimes, even long after the moment has passed, that pattern stays with you.
I’ve noticed how easy it is for that same pattern to show up in our spiritual lives. We run from what hurt us, we run from what we don’t understand, and sometimes, we even run from God. Not because we hate Him, but because we don’t know what to do with the weight we carry.
A God Who Meets You in Desperation
What stands out in my family’s story isn’t just the hardship. It’s what happened in the middle of it. In moments where there was no logical way out, there were cries to God. Quiet prayers at first, then desperate ones when everything else failed.
There’s something about desperation that strips everything down. You stop pretending, stop managing, and you just cry out. And it’s often there, in that raw place, that God steps in. Not always the way we expect, but in ways we can’t deny.
I’ve seen this pattern again and again. God doesn’t wait for perfect conditions. He meets people in chaos, in fear, in places where they feel like they’re barely holding on. And sometimes, it doesn’t look dramatic on the outside, but internally, something shifts. Hope begins to rise where there was none.
Fighting to Survive vs. Learning to Surrender
As generations move forward, trauma doesn’t just disappear. It changes form. What was once running becomes fighting. You build walls, you stay guarded, you learn not to trust. It can sneak up on you, the way survival instincts become your personality.
I saw that in my own family. Strength was defined by toughness. Vulnerability wasn’t an option. And while that might protect you for a while, it doesn’t heal you.
There’s a difference between surviving and being restored. Survival says, “I’ll handle this myself.” Surrender says, “God, I can’t do this without You.” And that shift, as simple as it sounds, is where everything begins to change.
When God Rewrites the Story
At some point, God begins to interrupt the pattern. He starts to show Himself in ways that are hard to ignore. And what I’ve learned is that God is incredibly personal in how He reaches people.
In my family, that turning point didn’t come through arguments or debates. It came through encounter. Through a moment where God made Himself known in a way that cut through years of resistance.
And that’s how He often works. He doesn’t just give information. He reveals Himself. When that happens, running loses its grip. You realize you’re not being chased to be punished, but pursued to be rescued.
A Faith That Becomes Real
When someone truly encounters Jesus, it doesn’t stay theoretical. It changes how they live. I grew up watching that transformation up close. Faith wasn’t just something we talked about. It was something we lived.
People would come into our home carrying all kinds of pain, all kinds of brokenness. And instead of turning them away, my parents leaned in. They believed God could actually set people free. And they lived like that was true.
Looking back, I didn’t always understand everything happening. But I could see the fruit. Lives changing. People finding freedom. And slowly, it started to shape my understanding of who God is.
Here’s what I want you to hear clearly. No matter what your story looks like right now, it’s not finished. Trauma may be part of it, but it doesn’t get the final word.
God has a way of taking what was meant to break you and turning it into something that builds you.
From Survival to Masterpiece
The end of the story isn’t just survival. It’s transformation. Scripture describes us as God’s workmanship, His masterpiece. That means He’s not just trying to get you through life. He’s shaping you into something meaningful.
“For we are God’s masterpiece. He has created us anew in Christ Jesus, so we can do the good things he planned for us long ago.” Ephesians 2:10
That process takes surrender. It takes trust. And sometimes it starts with something as simple as saying, “God, I’m done running.”
I’ve had to come back to that place more than once. And every time, I’m reminded that His grace is not exhausted. His patience hasn’t run out. He’s still writing.
And He’s writing something better than what we could have planned for ourselves. He won’t just change our direction, He’ll rewrite our story.
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