Holy Saturday is quiet.
No miracles. No victory songs. No resurrection, yet.
Just waiting.
It’s the day most people skip, but it’s the day many of us live in.
When God Seems Silent
Holy Saturday teaches us something uncomfortable:
God can be fully at work even when He appears absent.
The disciples didn’t know what was coming. The tomb was sealed. Hope felt buried.
And yet, God was not inactive.
God was finishing what the cross began.
Faith Without a Timeline
Holy Saturday faith doesn’t rely on visible progress. It trusts without updates. It waits without guarantees.
This is the kind of faith formed when:
- Prayers haven’t been answered yet
- The situation hasn’t shifted
- The breakthrough hasn’t shown up
Holy Saturday — the day most of us skip over.
We go from the grief of Good Friday straight to the celebration of Easter Sunday. But what about the day in between?
That quiet, uncertain Saturday is actually where a lot of us live — waiting on a prayer that hasn’t been answered, a situation that hasn’t shifted, a breakthrough that hasn’t shown up yet.
The disciples thought it was over. The tomb was sealed. Hope felt buried.
Silence does not mean abandonment.
Sometimes heaven is quiet because it’s working underground.
To everyone, Jesus was in the grave! It looked like it was over. But He was not finished yet!
Holy Saturday reminds us: God is working in our waiting and waiting does not negate faith. Sometimes waiting is faith.