When Faith Happens at Night
Lift up your hands toward the holy place, and bless the [Holy One]. – Psalm 134:2 (NRSV)
Most days, faith doesn’t feel loud. It isn’t a shout, rather a whisper across generations. It feels like staying awake when everything in you wants to shut down. It feels like scrolling past headlines that break your heart and choosing, somehow, not to become numb. It feels like continuing to care when caring costs more than it used to.
The psalmist’s words weren’t written for the victorious but for the faithful who are tired. Whose devotion remains when certainty is gone and answers are delayed. The psalm names the holiness of those who keep vigil. It blesses the night-shift believers, the ones who keep loving when policies wound, grief accumulates, when the future feels unstable. The ones who are awake and watching while the world churns.
It’s for the ones who are still showing up. Still trying to live with integrity in systems that reward cruelty and speed and spectacle. It’s about offering your open palms and saying: I am still here.
Still willing. Still human. Still choosing love over despair.
And here’s the quiet miracle of this psalm: The blessing doesn’t simply go upward, from you to an unattainable God in the sky. The God who formed galaxies blesses you, the ones who stay awake at night worrying about your kids, your communities, your bodies, the future.
If today your faith feels small, unseen, or exhausted, hear this: That isn’t failure, it’s fidelity.
Prayer
Ancient One, I open my hands to you. I take one breath. And I say to myself and to You, “I am still here.” For you, for me, and that is enough.
About the AuthorSam Houser centers their ministry on the sacred work of repair and reconciliation within wounded systems. Currently they are Theologian in Residence at First Congregational UCC in Sioux Falls, SD.