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Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Daily Devotions for Tuesday, April 14, 2026: A Shelter in the Shaking

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The Daily Devotional

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

A Shelter in the Shaking

“God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble. Therefore we will not fear, though the earth should change, though the mountains shake in the heart of the sea; though its waters roar and foam, though the mountains tremble with its tumult.”Psalm 6:1–3

Reflection

The words of Psalm 46 were not written for sunny days or seasons of easy peace. They were penned for times of profound upheaval. The Psalmist does not deny the harsh realities of the world; rather, he assumes them. He acknowledges that the earth does change, that the waters do foam, and that the seemingly immovable mountains of our lives sometimes tremble and shake. It is not a theology of avoidance, but a theology for the dark—a resilient declaration that even when the foundations of our world give way, we are not left without an anchor.

Throughout history, April 14 has frequently acted as a day that strips away our illusions of control, serving as a solemn reminder of human fragility. It reads almost like a calendar of turning points and shattered certainties. On this day in 1865, just as a weary, fractured nation believed the bloodshed of the Civil War was finally ending, President Abraham Lincoln was shot at Ford’s Theatre. It was a tragic testament to the fact that even our most profound moments of relief and victory can be suddenly pierced by deep sorrow, reminding us that societal healing is often unfinished and deeply vulnerable.

Decades later, late in the evening of April 14, 1912, the RMS Titanic—an engineering marvel widely believed to be unsinkable—collided with an iceberg in the icy waters of the North Atlantic. In a matter of hours, humanity’s brilliant ingenuity and towering pride were humbled by the quiet, ancient, and indifferent forces of nature. Then, on April 14, 1935, the Great Plains were swallowed by the terrifying darkness of "Black Sunday." A massive Dust Bowl storm turned midday into midnight, sweeping away the topsoil that millions depended upon and proving that our mastery over the earth is fragile at best. Exactly four years later, on April 14, 1939, John Steinbeck published The Grapes of Wrath, a masterpiece that captured the profound suffering, desperate endurance, and enduring dignity of everyday people crushed beneath the weight of those exact storms and the Great Depression.

Lincoln’s assassination, the Titanic’s demise, and the blinding dust of Black Sunday all point toward a singular, uncomfortable truth: we are profoundly vulnerable. We love the illusion of invincibility. We desperately want to believe we can engineer our way out of tragedy, outrun our grief, or build walls high enough to keep the storms at bay.

You can likely recognize this desire for control in your own life. Have you ever been driving down a familiar, well-paved highway when a sudden, blinding wall of fog rolls in? One moment, you are the absolute master of your environment. The climate control is set perfectly, a podcast is playing over the speakers, your cruise control is locked in, and you know exactly where you are going. You feel entirely secure. But the very next moment, visibility drops to zero. Instinctively, you tap the brakes, turn off the radio, and lean forward, gripping the steering wheel with white knuckles. In that split second, your illusion of total control evaporates. You are suddenly, acutely aware of your vulnerability, entirely dependent on the faint taillights ahead of you and the unseen road beneath your tires. We spend much of our lives driving in the clear, forgetting that the fog is always a possibility.

We build our own "unsinkable" ships—our careers, our financial plans, our carefully curated reputations. We assume that because we have survived a particular season of conflict, the danger is entirely past. Yet, turning points often arrive unannounced. When the foundation shakes—when the doctor's phone call brings unexpected news, when a career path suddenly vanishes, or when a cherished relationship fractures—we are left standing face-to-face with our own limitations. We realize that we are merely dust, beautifully made, but easily scattered.

This is precisely where the ancient promise of Psalm 46 meets us. Notice carefully that the Psalmist does not say, "God is our guarantee that the earth will never change." He says, "God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble." God’s promise is not immunity from the sorrows of April 14; His promise is unwavering, compassionate intimacy within them. When our strength gives way to loss, and our certainty gives way to unpredictability, we are not falling into an abyss—we are falling into the hands of God.

Today, you might be feeling the weight of a personal "Black Sunday," carrying the unfinished grief of a battle you thought was already won, or mourning a dream that has sunk beneath the waves. The gentle challenge for us today is to stop trying to be unsinkable. Let go of the exhausting, heavy demand to control every outcome. Acknowledge your fragility, not with shame or fear, but with the quiet relief of a child climbing into a loving parent's lap. Let your vulnerabilities become the very places where you experience God's steadfast presence. The mountains may tremble, and the waters may roar, but you are safely held by the hands that shaped the earth.

Prayer

God of all comfort and Sovereign over every storm, we come to You today acknowledging how small we are and how fragile our certainties can be. When our carefully laid plans collapse, or when the shadows of sudden grief and upheaval sweep over our lives, remind us that we are never abandoned. Teach us to release our white-knuckled grip on the illusion of control, and help us instead to trust in Your steadfast, abiding presence. Grant us the courage to face our own vulnerabilities with grace, the compassion to sit quietly with others in their sorrow, and the unshakable hope that anchors us when the waters rise. You are our refuge and our strength; hold us close. In Your holy name we pray, Amen.


Devotional by: Kenny Sallee, ThM — Deming, NM, USA

The Bible texts are from the New Revised Standard Version (NRSV) Bible, copyright © 1989, 1993, the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.