ODB: Prayer in Disguise
April 29, 2026
READ: Job 19:5-12
God has wronged me and drawn his net around me. Job 19:6
After the horrors of Auschwitz, Elie Wiesel lost his faith. “Where were you, God of kindness?” he asked, recalling the evil he and others suffered. “In my childhood I did not expect much from human beings. But I expected everything from you.”
And yet, Wiesel realized later that his faith had never really left him. “It is because I believed in God that I was angry at God,” he told a journalist, “and still am.” You don’t get angry at someone you don’t believe exists.
We might feel uncomfortable expressing anger at God, but biblical characters did. “You deceived me,
Despite his questions, Elie Wiesel prayed, “Let us make up. It is unbearable to be divorced from you so long.” We too might be angry at God for not limiting the suffering in our world, but our expressing it to Him can become prayer in disguise—keeping us close to the God who wants us to bring not just our praise but our anger to Him too.
— Sheridan Voysey
When have you felt angry at God? How can Job’s story help us express and keep a clear perspective?
Dear God, I'm angry at the suffering in this world, but choose to trust You. For further study, read Job and the God Who Would Not Be Chained at odbm.org.
Source: Our Daily Bread



