Where God works in obscurity
May 28, 2026 | Silver Spring, Maryland, United States | Hensley Mooroven for Adventist Review
“Hide thyself by the brook Cherith” (1 Kings 17:3, KJV).
When God told Elijah, “Hide thyself by the brook Cherith,” He was not punishing him—He was preparing him. God sometimes calls His children away from the crowd so that He can work on the heart.
Cherith was a quiet place. No audience. No applause. Just a prophet, a brook, and a faithful God. Yet it was there—far from the spotlight—that Elijah learned lessons that would sustain him when the fire later fell on Mount Carmel.
God still works this way today. Before He changes what we see around us, He often changes what is forming within us.
From Cherith, three powerful lessons emerge for every heart that God is still shaping:
Hidden Before He Is Heard
God works in us before He works through us.
Before Elijah could be seen by the nation, he had to be shaped by the Lord. Before he was heard by kings, he listened to God alone.
Faith grows in secret before it stands in public. Prayer in the quiet strengthens testimony in the open.
If we rush past our Cherith, our faith may sound loud—but stand weak.
Dependent, Not Self-sufficient
God supplies daily what we cannot store permanently.
At Cherith, Elijah had no backup plan. The brook gave water. The ravens brought food. Every day was an act of trust. God was teaching him—and us—that faith is not about control but about reliance.
We often want security without surrender, blessing without trusting. But God reminds us at the brook:
We are not the source—God is the supply.
Not yesterday’s faith. Not tomorrow’s worry. Just today’s trust. Just grace.
Prepared Before He Is Positioned
The quiet and hidden places shape us for the calling place.
Cherith was not the end of Elijah’s story—it was the beginning of his strength. The fire on Mount Carmel did not start on the mountain; it started by the brook.
God prepares His people privately before He uses them publicly.
Those who skip the process will struggle in the purpose.
The brook builds the faith that survives the fire.
A word for your spiritual walk:
If God has led you into a season of quiet, do not despair.
If He has slowed your steps, He is likely strengthening your roots.
The brook is not rejection—it is refinement.
Not a delay—but a design.
What feels like hiding may be God preparing you to shine.
Cherith is never a setback. It is always a setup—for greater faith and deeper trust. Amen!
Hensley Mooroven is undersecretary of the General Conference.