The Paradox of Peace: Why Surrender Works When Control Fails

Most of us aren’t peace-deprived because of our schedules.
We’re peace-deprived because of our soul strategies.

We’re trying to control what only God can carry.

We live in a world that shouts, “Take control of your life!”
But God? He whispers, “Give it to Me.”

Here’s the paradox:
Peace doesn’t come from control.
It comes from surrender.

But surrender isn’t easy.
Not because we’re bad Christians—
but because we’re human.

We’re afraid.
We’ve been hurt.
We’ve trusted before… and been let down.
So we hold on tighter.

We call it “being responsible,”
but let’s be honest—
it’s just fear in a suit and tie.

“Let go and let God” sounds great—until God takes longer than we want.
We say we trust Him…
but deep down, we still want the tracking number.
We want to see how He’s progressing with our prayer requests.

Here’s the truth:
Our anxiety is trying to tell us something.
Not just psychologically—
but spiritually.

It’s a signal.
A sign that we’re trying to be God
in a place where we’re meant to trust God.

Let’s be real.
A lot of us treat trust like a spiritual bungee jump.
We’ll technically let go…
but only if we’re still clipped into a backup plan, five exit strategies,
and at least one color-coded spreadsheet.

So here’s the big, uncomfortable question:

Why does surrender feel so unsafe—
even when control clearly isn’t working?

We live in a world that praises hustle,
glorifies certainty,
and sells planners in bulk.

But the Gospel invites us into something different.
Not passive resignation.
Not spiritual YOLO.

But entrustment.
That quiet, brave act of placing something precious into God’s hands—
and not yanking it back thirty seconds later.

So if you’ve ever found yourself wondering—
“Maybe I’m not the best person to be in charge of everything…”
You’re in good company.

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