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He That Walketh in Darkness

5 min · 18. juni 2026
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Description

Isaiah’s striking description of the man of faith as one who “walketh in darkness, and hath no light” confronts our natural desire for clarity, explanations, and visible guidance, for faith does not remove darkness but requires us to trust God within it. We cannot see beyond the present, nor can we fully understand past sorrows or unanswered prayers, and Scripture forbids us from kindling our own light seeking certainty by sight, explanation, or self-made assurance because such attempts only lead to sorrow. To walk in darkness is therefore to walk by faith alone, acknowledging that man cannot live by sight and that no torch of human reason or confidence can illumine life’s mysteries. God ordains this darkness so that we may reach for His hand rather than rely on ourselves, for if we had light of our own, we would not cling to Him. Thus, darkness is not abandonment but mercy, drawing us nearer to God, teaching us dependence, and proving that it is grace alone which brings us safely through the night and will finally lead us home.

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