Trusting in God’s Faithfulness
Jeremiah 17:7–10 (NIV)
Have you ever noticed how so much of life feels uncertain? There was a time when people believed if you worked hard and stayed faithful, everything would turn out fine. But today, people work multiple jobs and still struggle. Health insurance doesn’t guarantee health. Long friendships can dissolve overnight. And if you scroll through the news, it feels like the world shifts from one crisis to the next.Someone recently told me, “Pastor, it feels like I’m standing on shaky ground. Every time I get a little peace, something else crashes into my life.” Maybe you’ve felt that too — wanting to trust God, but struggling because the weight of life feels heavier than your faith.
It’s into that place that Jeremiah speaks:
“Blessed is the one who trusts in the Lord, whose confidence is in Him.” (Jeremiah 17:7)
Jeremiah gives us a powerful metaphor — a tree planted by water. Not a tree that happened to grow somewhere… but planted. That means intentionality. Purpose. Placement.
You are not drifting. You are placed.
A tree does not grow overnight. Its strength lies beneath the surface — in the roots no one sees. The storms may rage above the ground, but the roots determine whether the tree remains standing.
“It does not fear when heat comes.” (Jeremiah 17:8)
Trusting God doesn’t mean avoiding heat. It means the heat won’t destroy you.
Jesus echoes this in Matthew 7:24–25 — the wise build on the rock. The storms come, but the house stands.
Jeremiah says the tree “never fails to bear fruit,” even in drought. That means your environment doesn’t dictate your growth — your source does.
Fruit doesn’t always look like money in your pocket.
Sometimes fruit is:
- Joy when bitterness seems easier
- Hope when others quit
- Peace when chaos surrounds you (Philippians 4:7)
Jeremiah is asking each of us: What are you rooted in?
- Social media approval?
- A job title?
- Your own strength?
Or the promises of God?
“Cast all your anxiety on Him because He cares for you.” (1 Peter 5:7)
You can't bear fruit if your hands are full of worry.
A young woman lost her job unexpectedly. Bills stacked up. One day she read Jeremiah 17 and shifted her prayer — from pleading to trusting. Instead of “God, fix this,” she prayed, “God, I trust You.”
She said, “I realized God didn’t just keep me alive — He kept me green.”
You may be in a season of heat. You may be in a year of drought. But if your trust is in the Lord, you will not wither, you will not break, and you will still bear fruit.
Plant your roots in Jesus — the stream that never runs dry, the Rock that never shifts, the Shepherd who never leaves His sheep.
“Blessed is the one who trusts in the Lord.” (Jeremiah 17:7)
— Rev. Dr. Sterling L. Eaton, Pastor of Prospect Park UMC
Jeremiah 17:7–10 (NIV)
Have you ever noticed how so much of life feels uncertain? There was a time when people believed if you worked hard and stayed faithful, everything would turn out fine. But today, people work multiple jobs and still struggle. Health insurance doesn’t guarantee health. Long friendships can dissolve overnight. And if you scroll through the news, it feels like the world shifts from one crisis to the next.Someone recently told me, “Pastor, it feels like I’m standing on shaky ground. Every time I get a little peace, something else crashes into my life.” Maybe you’ve felt that too — wanting to trust God, but struggling because the weight of life feels heavier than your faith.
It’s into that place that Jeremiah speaks:
“Blessed is the one who trusts in the Lord, whose confidence is in Him.” (Jeremiah 17:7)
Jeremiah gives us a powerful metaphor — a tree planted by water. Not a tree that happened to grow somewhere… but planted. That means intentionality. Purpose. Placement.
You are not drifting. You are placed.
A tree does not grow overnight. Its strength lies beneath the surface — in the roots no one sees. The storms may rage above the ground, but the roots determine whether the tree remains standing.
“It does not fear when heat comes.” (Jeremiah 17:8)
Trusting God doesn’t mean avoiding heat. It means the heat won’t destroy you.
Jesus echoes this in Matthew 7:24–25 — the wise build on the rock. The storms come, but the house stands.
Jeremiah says the tree “never fails to bear fruit,” even in drought. That means your environment doesn’t dictate your growth — your source does.
Fruit doesn’t always look like money in your pocket.
Sometimes fruit is:
- Joy when bitterness seems easier
- Hope when others quit
- Peace when chaos surrounds you (Philippians 4:7)
Jeremiah is asking each of us: What are you rooted in?
- Social media approval?
- A job title?
- Your own strength?
Or the promises of God?
“Cast all your anxiety on Him because He cares for you.” (1 Peter 5:7)
You can't bear fruit if your hands are full of worry.
A young woman lost her job unexpectedly. Bills stacked up. One day she read Jeremiah 17 and shifted her prayer — from pleading to trusting. Instead of “God, fix this,” she prayed, “God, I trust You.”
She said, “I realized God didn’t just keep me alive — He kept me green.”
You may be in a season of heat. You may be in a year of drought. But if your trust is in the Lord, you will not wither, you will not break, and you will still bear fruit.
Plant your roots in Jesus — the stream that never runs dry, the Rock that never shifts, the Shepherd who never leaves His sheep.
“Blessed is the one who trusts in the Lord.” (Jeremiah 17:7)
— Rev. Dr. Sterling L. Eaton, Pastor of Prospect Park UMC
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