Have you ever looked around your life and realized that the people who were supposed to be in your corner aren’t there?
Maybe it was the slow ache of carrying something alone and realizing you’re the only one carrying it.
David knew that feeling. He wrote a whole psalm from inside a cave — hunted, betrayed by someone he trusted, with no defender at his right hand. In the cave, he didn’t just cry out to God. He taught us how to pray when we’re cornered.
In this episode, Rachel walks through Psalm 142 and we’ll discover what David teaches us about praying inside the cave and not just trying to pray his way out of it.
We close with a recently answered prayer story about a grandmother who was praying for an earlier specialist appointment for her daughter — and watched God answer it through a doorway no one was looking at.
You’ll discover:
- What David means by “no one at my right hand” and why it matters for your loneliest seasons
- The Hebrew word at the top of Psalm 142 that changes how we read the whole psalm
- How to pray when the cave is also a prison — and you can’t see the way out
- Why God sometimes shows up inside the cornered moment, not after it
If today’s episode put words to a season you’re in, remember this: God is your refuge in the place — not just out of it.
Resources Mentioned
Desperate Prayers: Embracing the Power of Prayer in Life’s Darkest Moments — desperateprayers.com