Dec. 23, 2025

When Your Soul Feels Dry

When Your Soul Feels Dry

Still believe in God but feel numb, distant, and spiritually dry? In this episode, see how God meets you in the desert places of your soul and gently awakens your desire for His presence again.

Have you ever gone through a season where you keep showing up to church, maybe even reading your Bible and praying, but inside you feel…nothing?

You still believe. You haven’t walked away. But your soul feels flat. Your prayers seem to bounce off the ceiling. Worship songs don’t move you like they used to. You look back on times when you felt close to God and quietly wonder, “What’s wrong with me now?”

In this episode, Bart tells the story of C.S. Lewis after the death of his wife. The man who had written so beautifully about faith found himself sitting alone in a quiet house, feeling like God had “slammed the door” in his face and double-bolted it. He still believed, but he felt numb and abandoned. His soul was dry, and the God he’d written about seemed a million miles away. Instead of pretending he was okay or walking away from God, Lewis chose a different path.

Through his journal (which later became A Grief Observed) and the words of Psalm 63:1, you’ll see that spiritual dryness is not a sign that your faith is broken; it can be the place where God does some of His deepest work.

Psalm 63:1 (NLT) says:

“O God, you are my God; I earnestly search for you.

My soul thirsts for you;

my whole body longs for you

in this parched and weary land

where there is no water.”

David wrote those words in the wilderness, not in a peaceful prayer retreat. He knew what it felt like to be in a “parched and weary land”, outside and inside. Instead of hiding it, he brought his thirst, his dryness, and his longing straight to God.

Bart unpacks how C.S. Lewis did something similar. In A Grief Observed, Lewis poured out raw questions, anger, confusion, and silence to God over and over again. He didn’t clean it up. He didn’t fake closeness he didn’t feel. But as time passed, the tone of his writing slowly shifted—from sharp pain to a humbler, quieter trust. He never got all the answers he wanted, but he discovered that even when God felt absent, God was still holding him.

Lewis moved from simply writing about thirst to living Psalm 63:1: “my soul thirsts for you…in this parched and weary land.” His story reminds us that dryness doesn’t mean the end of faith. It can be the beginning of a more honest, deeper relationship with God.

If your soul feels dry right now, this episode will remind you that:

You are not the first believer to feel far from God.

Thirst is not failure; it’s evidence that your heart is still alive.

You don’t have to fix your dryness before you come to God; you come to Him in your dryness.

Honest, even messy prayer is often how God slowly awakens your desire for Him again.

You’ll be encouraged to stop pretending you’re “fine,” and instead begin talking to God from where you really are: tired, numb, confused, or just flat. And you’ll see that those simple, honest prayers can become the doorway to renewed desire and a softer, more responsive heart.

Main Scripture:

Psalm 63:1 (NLT) –

“O God, you are my God; I earnestly search for you.

My soul thirsts for you;

my whole body longs for you

in this parched and weary land

where there is no water.”

By the end of this episode, you’ll be reminded:

  • That dry seasons are a normal part of the Christian life, not proof that God has left you.
  • That God can handle your honest questions, disappointment, and numbness.
  • That continuing to seek God, even when you don’t feel Him, is itself an act of faith.
  • That spiritual drought can become the very place where God gently rekindles your hunger for Him.

Today’s Challenge:

Find a quiet moment today, maybe in your car, on a walk, or sitting at the edge of your bed, and pray Psalm 63:1 out loud, honestly and in your own words.

You might say something like:

“God, You are my God. Right now I feel dry and far from You. My soul doesn’t feel alive, but I want to thirst for You again. Meet me in this parched and weary place.”

If you can, write Psalm 63:1 on a card or in your notes app and keep it somewhere you’ll see it. Let that verse become your prayer in this season, trusting that God hears you even when your feelings haven’t caught up yet.

Encouraged by today’s devotion?

Share this episode with someone who feels far from God or spiritually numb right now. A simple link from you might be the reminder they need that dryness is not the end of their story.

https://www.dailydevotionsforbusylives.com/136

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Feeling spiritually drained? Start here. Download your free copy of my eBook Making Time for Jesus here.

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A well-known Christian author sits alone in his house

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after the funeral of his wife. The cards have stopped coming,

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the visitors have gone home, and the man who once wrote so

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beautifully about faith now feels nothing but numbness. C. S.

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Lewis tried to pray, but he said it felt like God had slammed the

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door in his face and double-bolted it. He still

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believed, but his soul felt dry, and his prayers seemed to bounce

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off the ceiling. And the God that he'd written about seemed a

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million miles away. How does someone that honest about

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spiritual emptiness keep seeking God instead of walking away?

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Welcome to Daily Devotions for Busy Lives. I'm Bart Leger, and

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today we're talking about those seasons when your soul feels dry.

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You're still going to church, and you're still saying the

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right things, maybe even reading your Bible, but inside you feel

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distant from God. The feelings you used to have, feelings of

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joy and warmth and closeness, those all seem to be gone, and

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all you're left with is spiritual sand in your mouth.

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When David wrote those words, he wasn't sitting in a quiet chapel

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with worship music playing. He was in the wilderness, a dry and

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hard place. Everything around him felt empty and exposed, and

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that's the language he used for his soul also, parched and weary.

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And that might be exactly how your spiritual life feels right

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now. There are seasons when faith feels alive and vibrant.

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You sense God's nearness, and His Word seems to jump off the

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page. And worship moves you so deeply. But there are also those

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seasons when you feel like you're just going through the

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motions. You bow your head, but the words feel flat. You open

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your Bible, but your mind wanders. I know mine does that

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quite often. I have to bring it back. And you sing songs, but

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when you do, your heart feels like you're just going through

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the motions. If that's where you are, I want you to hear this

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clearly. Spiritual dryness doesn't mean you're broken

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beyond repair, and it doesn't mean that God has abandoned you.

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Many of the people we most admire in Scripture walked

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through dry seasons themselves. The difference is not that they

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always felt close to God. It's that, like David, they kept

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saying, Oh God, you are my God. My soul thirsts for you, even

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when their emotions didn't match. Notice what David doesn't say.

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My soul has it all together. He says, my soul thirsts. Thirst is

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not a sign of failure. It's a sign of life, because a dead

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heart doesn't thirst for God. A living heart can feel dry and

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still say, Lord, I miss you, and I want you. I don't feel you

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right now, but I want to feel close to you again. Maybe that's

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where you are. You still believe, but you feel numb, and you

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remember seasons when you felt closer to God than you do now,

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and you're not even sure when the distance started. Work got

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busy, maybe grief moved into your life, or your prayers went

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unanswered, and then disappointment settled in, and

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little by little, your soul dried out. What do you do then?

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You do what David did. You start right where you are, and you

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tell the truth. Oh God, you are my God. My soul thirsts for you.

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I feel like I'm in a parched and weary land, and there's no water.

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That's not a fancy prayer, but it is an honest one, and God

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meets us in honesty. You also keep showing up, even when it

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feels hollow. You keep opening scripture, even if it's just a

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few verses, and you keep turning your face toward God, even if

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all you can say is, Lord, I don't feel anything right now,

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but I'm here. Spiritual dryness often doesn't break with one

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emotional moment. It slowly softens as we keep bringing our

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emptiness to God instead of running from Him. In the journal

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that became A Grief Observed, C. S. Lewis didn't pretend. He

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poured out raw anger and questions and silence to God

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again and again. Over time, the tone of his writings shifted

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from sharp pain to a humbler, deeper trust. He never got tidy

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answers, but he discovered that even when God felt absent, God

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was still holding him. Lewis moved from writing about thirst

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to living Psalm 63.1. My soul thirsts for you in this parched

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and weary land. This story reminds us that spiritual

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dryness isn't the end of the road. It can be the place where

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God gently awakens our desire for His presence again. Maybe

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God is doing something like that in you. You may not feel a

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sudden rush of emotion, but there might be a small stubborn

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desire that won't go away, a quiet, God, I miss you. That

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desire, as weak as it feels, is actually a gift from Him. He is

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the one awakening that in you. Here's today's challenge.

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Sometime today, find a quiet moment, maybe in your car or on

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a walk or sitting on the edge of your bed and pray Psalm 63.1 out

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loud, exactly as you are. You might say, Lord, this is how I

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feel. My soul feels dry, but I want to thirst for you again.

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Please, meet me in this parched and weary place. And you don't

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have to fix your dryness before you come to Him. Come to Him in

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your dryness and let Him begin the work of softening your heart.

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Lord, you see every dry and weary heart listening right now.

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Thank you that you don't shame us for feeling far from you.

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Instead, you invite us to bring that dryness to you. Please

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awaken our desire for your presence again. Meet us in the

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wilderness places and gently draw us back to you. In Jesus'

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name, amen. If this episode has encouraged you, there's a good

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chance it will encourage someone else who feels far from God

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right now. Would you share it with a friend or loved one? Just

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copy the link in the show notes and send it their way. You never

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know how much they might need it today. Thanks for helping me

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spread the word. It really does mean a lot to me. And thanks for

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joining me today on Daily Devotions for Busy Lives.

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Remember, when your soul feels dry, that thirst can be the very

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place where God meets you and stirs your heart again. Come

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back next time for more encouragement to help you live

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grounded in God's truth. Until then, God bless and have a great

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day.