
There is a particular moment in ministry — and, if we’re honest, in life — when someone begins to share a problem and you can feel it rise up within you like a reflex.
A tightening of the shoulders.
A sharpening of the mind.
A quiet internal voice saying, “Ah yes, I know exactly how to fix this.”
This voice is persuasive. It has diagrams. It has bullet points. It has, occasionally, a laminated flow chart.
And yet, one of the quiet spiritual disciplines I have been learning — slowly, imperfectly, and with much backsliding — is the holy art of not fixing everything.
This is deeply counter-cultural. We live in a world that rewards solutions, celebrates efficiency, and applauds those who can swoop in with a wrench, a spreadsheet, or a seven-step plan before the kettle has finished boiling. Even in the Church, we can confuse faithfulness with productivity, and compassion with problem-solving.
But Scripture, inconveniently, keeps telling a different story.
God, it seems, is less interested in being our divine handyman and more interested in being present. When Moses panics at the burning bush, God does not hand him a comprehensive leadership manual. When Elijah collapses under the weight of despair, God does not offer motivational slogans — only sleep, bread, and the sound of sheer silence. When Jesus meets people in pain, he often begins not with solutions, but with questions: What do you want? Do you see this? Will you stay?
Sometimes the most faithful thing we can do is resist the urge to fix, manage, tidy, or resolve — and instead remain present. To sit. To listen. To pray quietly. To trust that God is already at work in ways that exceed our competence and bypass our best intentions.
Stephen Leacock always delighted in pointing out how seriously we take ourselves while making a terrible mess of things. I suspect he would have enjoyed the spectacle of clergy and laity alike rushing about with theological duct tape, earnestly patching situations God never asked us to repair.
There is, after all, a difference between loving care and anxious control. One grows out of trust; the other out of fear. One leaves room for grace; the other crowds it out entirely.
Not fixing everything does not mean indifference. It means humility. It means remembering that salvation is, mercifully, above our pay grade. It means stepping back just far enough to let God be God — and discovering, to our surprise, that the world does not collapse without our constant intervention.
Sometimes the greatest gift we offer is not an answer, but our presence. Not a solution, but a prayer. Not a fix, but faith.
And occasionally, the bravest thing we can say is:
“I don’t know. But God does.”
A Prayer
Gracious God,
Save us from the anxious need to fix what we do not fully understand.
Teach us the patience of presence,
the courage to trust,
and the humility to step aside when you are already at work.
Help us to listen more than we speak,
to love more than we manage,
and to rest in the truth that the world is held — securely and lovingly — in your hands, not ours.
Amen.








