Religion

Friday, June 6, 2025

Grief Is a Journey, Not a Destination: Embracing the New Normal


Why Healing from Grief Isn’t the Same as Getting Past It

There are things people stop saying out loud after a while.

At first, when your world falls apart, everyone rushes in—meals, messages, flowers, prayers. But as the calendar pages turn, something shifts. People stop asking. The texts slow. The invitations return. The silence grows. And in that silence, an unspoken expectation starts to surface:

Shouldn’t you be doing better by now?

And so, I want to say something clearly—not just for myself, but for anyone whose grief doesn’t fit inside someone else’s timeline:

I’m not over it. I’m living with it.
And no, those aren’t the same thing.


The World Wants a Timeline. Grief Refuses One.

There is a deep discomfort in our culture around prolonged sorrow. We like beginnings, middles, and clean endings. We want people to "move on"—not out of cruelty, but out of fear. Because if your grief is still here, still raw, still reshaping you… then we have to admit that some things in life are not fixable.

But grief, real grief, doesn’t follow a linear path.
It’s not a staircase you climb.
It’s more like the ocean—calm one moment, stormy the next.
You can’t schedule the waves.

As the Psalmist reminds us:
“The Lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit.”
—Psalm 34:18

Grief arrives, and it stays. It evolves. It surprises you. Some days, you carry it lightly, like a stone in your pocket. Other days, it sits on your chest and steals the air from your lungs. Time does not erase it—it just teaches you how to breathe around it.


I Didn’t Just Lose a Person—I Lost a Life I Knew

People often try to relate by comparing losses. But not all grief carries the same weight or shape. I didn’t lose someone I saw on holidays or called every few weeks. I lost the person I made my coffee next to every morning. The one who filled the house with warmth, laughter, security, routine. The one I whispered to in the dark, made plans with, leaned on, leaned into.

We weren’t separate people with separate stories—we were a shared rhythm, a woven life. And when he died, that whole world collapsed. I didn’t just lose him. I lost the me who existed with him.

And no amount of time can undo that.
You don’t “move on” from the kind of love that made you who you are.


Healing Isn’t a Destination. It’s a Relationship.

I used to think healing would mean feeling better. That one day I’d wake up lighter, freer, whole again. But what I’ve learned is this:

Healing isn’t about escaping grief—it’s about learning how to walk with it.

Paul encourages us in 2 Corinthians 1:3-4:
“Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of compassion and the God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our troubles, so that we can comfort those in any trouble with the comfort we ourselves receive from God.”

I have grown stronger. I have found ways to smile again. I’ve felt flickers of joy, moments of peace. But the grief is still there, woven into every corner of this new life I didn’t choose.

Healing has looked like:

  • Letting the tears come without shame

  • Laughing in a moment of beauty and not feeling guilty afterward

  • Keeping his photos in my living room without needing to explain

  • Making space for both sorrow and hope at the same table

I’m not trying to get back to who I was. That person died, too.
I’m trying to honor who I’ve become—someone who loves deeper, feels wider, and understands that some wounds don’t close, but instead become sacred space.


The Pain of Being Misunderstood

There’s an added layer to grief that doesn’t get talked about enough—the pain of being misunderstood by those around you.

People don’t mean harm when they say things like:

  • “God has something different for the second half of your life”

  • “You still have your girls, focus on them”

  • “At least you had good years together”

But those words, however well-meaning, carry judgment. They imply that your continued sorrow is a sign of weakness, dysfunction, or delay. When in reality, your grief is a sign of your capacity to love. You hurt deeply because you loved deeply. You mourn because it mattered.

Jesus himself wept for his friend Lazarus (John 11:35) — the shortest verse in the Bible, but one packed with compassion. It shows us that grief is not a failure of faith, but a human expression of love and loss.


Living With Grief Means Carrying Love Forward

I still talk to him in the quiet. I still ache for him in the crowd. I still sense his absence in the empty chair, the songs he used to sing, the spaces where his voice used to live.

But I also carry him with me now—in the courage to keep going. In the softness I offer to others who are hurting. In the strength it takes to build a life on ground that once collapsed beneath me.

Grief doesn’t mean I’m stuck in the past.
It means I’m bringing the best of what was into the life that still is.
It means I’m choosing to live—not in spite of my loss—but because love is worth carrying forward.

As Romans 8:38-39 reminds us:
“For I am convinced that neither death nor life… nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.”


If You’re Grieving Too…

I want you to hear this in your bones:
You are not doing it wrong.
You are not behind.
You are not broken.

You are a person who was changed by love—and undone by its absence.
You are learning to breathe again in a world that feels foreign.
You are not “over it.” And you don’t have to be.

You are living with it. And that is the holiest kind of strength.

Thursday, June 5, 2025

Holy Endurance: Carrying the Cross You Didn’t Choose


"For it is commendable if someone bears up under the pain of unjust suffering because they are conscious of God.”

1 Peter 2:19 

The Kind of Pain That Has No Explanation

There’s a particular kind of pain that stings deeper than others — the pain of being wronged when your heart was pure. It’s one thing to face consequences you know you’ve earned. But what about when you’re misunderstood? Accused without cause? Cast aside or betrayed by people you loved and served?

This is what Peter speaks to in 1 Peter 2:19 — not just suffering, but unjust suffering. He’s writing to believers facing persecution not for wrongdoing, but for following Christ. His words, though ancient, still reach aching hearts today:

“Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.”
Matthew 5:10

God sees. God honors your endurance. And He counts it as beautiful.


1. God Sees What Others Overlook

The world often celebrates power, vindication, and visible justice. But the Kingdom of God pays attention to the quiet strength of those who choose mercy over vengeance — those who continue to love, even when their love is not returned. Who stay soft, even when life hardens them.

Peter says such endurance is commendable. Not because it earns favor, but because it reflects the very heart of Christ — who was slandered, abandoned, mocked, and crucified without cause.

“He was oppressed and afflicted, yet he did not open his mouth;
he was led like a lamb to the slaughter,
and as a sheep before its shearers is silent,
so he did not open his mouth.”

Isaiah 53:7

God sees every time you chose not to retaliate. Every time you stayed silent instead of fighting back. Every tear you cried alone because no one believed your story. And He calls it holy.


2. Conscious of God — Not People

What makes this endurance powerful is not just the act of bearing pain, but the awareness of God that drives it.

To be "conscious of God" means to live in constant awareness of His presence, His justice, His love. You’re not just trying to preserve your image or win sympathy. You’re living before the One who knows the full truth — even when others don’t.

“Am I now trying to win the approval of human beings, or of God? Or am I trying to please people?
If I were still trying to please people, I would not be a servant of Christ.”

Galatians 1:10

Being conscious of God reshapes how we endure:

  • We don’t suffer as victims. We suffer as beloved children.

  • We don’t need revenge. We wait on God’s redemption.

“Do not repay anyone evil for evil... Do not take revenge, my dear friends, but leave room for God’s wrath.”
Romans 12:17, 19


3. When Pain Has Purpose

Unjust suffering doesn’t mean God has abandoned you. In fact, it may mean He’s doing His most intimate work in you. The furnace of unfairness refines us. It opens us to the deep, unshakable truths of grace, humility, and hope.

“We also glory in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope.”
Romans 5:3–4

Through it, we are shaped into the image of Christ — who:

“...when they hurled their insults at him, he did not retaliate;
when he suffered, he made no threats.
Instead, he entrusted himself to him who judges justly.”

1 Peter 2:23


4. Your Story Is Not Over

You may be in a season where justice is delayed, where your voice feels unheard, and your integrity goes unseen. But the story isn’t finished.

1 Peter 2:19 reminds us that the way we carry pain matters — not because God demands our suffering, but because He transforms it into testimony.

“You intended to harm me, but God intended it for good to accomplish what is now being done.”
Genesis 50:20

You may never get the apology. But you can still walk in freedom, dignity, and peace — not because life was fair, but because God is faithful.


Final Encouragement

If you are bearing a quiet, lonely pain — the kind that doesn’t make headlines or gather sympathy — take heart. You are not invisible. You are not weak. You are walking in the footsteps of Jesus.

“Therefore, since Christ suffered in his body, arm yourselves also with the same attitude…
because whoever suffers in the body is done with sin.”

1 Peter 4:1

Your endurance, your restraint, your grace in the face of injustice — these things matter deeply to God.

You didn’t deserve the pain, but your response can become part of something redemptive.
You didn’t choose the suffering, but you can choose how you walk through it.
And you never walk alone.

Wednesday, June 4, 2025

Living Unapologetically, Healing Intentionally

There’s a quiet but radical truth many of us forget, especially when we’ve been conditioned to over-explain, to please, or to stay small:

You don’t have to justify your healing. Your rest. Your boundaries. Your joy.

Beautiful, blooming flowers serve as gentle reminders that you are allowed to live according to your truth — without shrinking to fit someone else’s understanding of your story.

Let’s pause and honor each of these sacred truths, not as trends or slogans — but as soul-anchoring principles for those reclaiming their peace, power, and purpose.


🌸 Why You Need Rest

You are allowed to be tired.
Not just from physical labor, but from emotional weight, spiritual exhaustion, or carrying more than your share of invisible burdens.

Rest isn’t laziness. It’s restoration. And in a culture that demands constant output, choosing to stop — to breathe, to nap, to do nothing — is one of the most revolutionary acts of self-trust you can make.

🕊 “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest.” – Matthew 11:28

You don’t have to explain why you went quiet. Why you pulled back. Why you didn’t answer the phone. Your soul deserves Sabbath, even if no one else understands your stillness.


🌺 Your Boundaries

Boundaries are not punishments. They are acts of self-respect.

They protect your time, your energy, your healing — especially from people or patterns that drain you. Setting a boundary might disappoint others, but it will never betray your wholeness.

Your no is sacred.
Your limit is holy.
Your peace is worth defending — even if it costs you the approval of those who benefitted from your lack of boundaries before.

🛡 “Above all else, guard your heart, for everything you do flows from it.” – Proverbs 4:23


🌷 Your Healing Journey

Healing is not linear. It’s layered. Cyclical. Sacred.

You don’t have to explain why you’re still not “over it.” Or why something small still triggers something big. Or why you’ve changed. Your healing is your own.

Some wounds aren’t visible.
Some griefs are wordless.
Some journeys take longer than others — and that’s okay.

You are allowed to mend at your own pace. You don’t need permission to feel deeply, to move slowly, to rebuild a life you didn’t ask to have shattered.


🌸 Your Eating Habits

You are not obligated to perform health or pleasure for anyone else. Whether you’re changing your diet, honoring cravings, choosing discipline, or indulging in comfort — it’s your relationship with food. And it’s yours alone.

No one else lives in your body.
No one else knows your cravings, your struggles, your victories.
You don’t owe anyone a reason for what’s on your plate.


🌺 Why You Are Saying No

“No” is not unkind. It’s honest.

When you say no, you're not rejecting someone. You're choosing yourself. You're naming what you have to give — and what you don't. That clarity is a gift, not a betrayal.

💬 “Let your ‘Yes’ be ‘Yes,’ and your ‘No,’ ‘No’…” – Matthew 5:37

You are not selfish for protecting your energy. You are self-aware.


🌷 Why You Are Making Changes

Change is uncomfortable — especially for those who benefited from your stagnancy.

You’re allowed to pivot. To shed roles that no longer fit. To unlearn, release, begin again. People might question your shift. Let them.

Your growth doesn’t require their consent.

You are not who you were. And that is a victory.


🌸 How You Spend Your Free Time

You don’t have to earn rest, joy, or delight.

Whether you spend your hours reading quietly, dancing in your kitchen, binge-watching shows, or walking in nature — it’s your time. And you get to decide how to nourish your soul.

You don’t owe anyone “productivity.” You don’t need to justify why rest or joy is enough.


🌺 Your Body Size or Shape

You are allowed to take up space.

Your body is not a problem to be solved. It’s a miracle — carrying your breath, your burdens, your resilience. And its worth isn’t tied to approval, acceptance, or aesthetics.

You don’t have to explain why your body has changed.
You don’t need to apologize for existing in your skin.

💗 “I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made.” – Psalm 139:14


🌷 What Makes You Happy in Life

Your joy doesn’t have to be understood to be valid.

If it makes your heart lighter, if it helps you feel alive, if it brings beauty or laughter or ease — it’s enough. Even if it’s unconventional. Even if no one else gets it.

You are allowed to chase joy, not just survival.


🌼 Final Word: You Are Not Here to Be Explained. You Are Here to Be Whole.

Let this image — this floral manifesto of freedom — be a gentle but firm reminder:

You don’t have to defend your softness.
You don’t have to justify your boundaries.
You don’t have to earn your healing.

You don’t owe the world an explanation for doing what helps you breathe better, live freer, and love yourself more deeply.

You are allowed to change.
You are allowed to rest.
You are allowed to protect your peace.

And that, beloved, is more than enough.

Tuesday, June 3, 2025

The Night Before It Changes: Waiting for a New Beginning


A Devotional for the Heart on the Edge of Healing


Hope Wakes Up in the Dark

There is a sacred stillness in the moments just before change. The night before everything shifts can feel heavy with uncertainty, anxiety, or even fear. Yet, this night is more than just darkness—it is a space where hope quietly rises.

Maybe you are in that place right now. Holding your breath, wondering when relief will come. Maybe your heart is tired from waiting and you wonder if the breakthrough will ever arrive. But remember: waiting does not mean forsaken. It means expectancy.

The Psalmist’s words remind us:

“I remain confident of this: I will see the goodness of the Lord in the land of the living.” — Psalm 27:13 

This is a bold declaration of faith, a promise that God's goodness is not only for eternity but for our present reality. It calls us to believe that even in our pain, God's blessings are unfolding around us. Not in some far-off place, but right here—where we live, breathe, and hope.


The Night Before the Light

When sorrow seems unending, when tears fall like rain in the night, it’s easy to feel alone or forgotten. But Scripture tells us that these moments are temporary, that dawn is coming.

“Weeping may endure for a night, but joy comes in the morning.” — Psalm 30:5 

This verse doesn’t minimize pain; it honors it. But it also assures us that joy follows the night of weeping. Healing is on its way, even if we can’t see it yet.

In those quiet moments when you feel powerless, God is fighting for you.

“The Lord will fight for you; you need only to be still.” — Exodus 14:14 

Being still doesn’t mean doing nothing. It means trusting God’s power over your battles. Sometimes the greatest courage is in surrender—resting, trusting, and allowing God to move on your behalf.


God Is Doing Something New—Even Now

Change often begins in silence. God’s work in our lives is sometimes hidden beneath the surface, growing quietly until it bursts forth in new life.

“See, I am doing a new thing! Now it springs up; do you not perceive it?” — Isaiah 43:19 

God’s new thing may look different than what we expect. It may challenge us, stretch us, and call us to trust Him in new ways. But it is always good and purposeful.

And even when the path seems unclear, God is weaving all things for our good.

“And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose.” — Romans 8:28 

This verse is a cornerstone of hope—it reassures us that no moment is wasted, no pain is meaningless. God is faithful, and His purpose is unfolding through every twist and turn.


Letting Go of the Old to Receive the New

Sometimes the hardest part of waiting is holding onto what’s behind us—old hurts, regrets, or fear of the unknown. But healing requires release.

“Forget the former things; do not dwell on the past.” — Isaiah 43:18 

This doesn’t mean we erase memories or pain but that we refuse to let them control our future. We step forward with courage, trusting God to carry what’s too heavy.

And God invites us to give Him our worries:

“Cast all your anxiety on him because he cares for you.” — 1 Peter 5:7 

It’s an invitation to trade our burdens for His peace. To surrender fear and stress, knowing that we are deeply loved and cared for.


You Are Closer Than You Think

Sometimes, the waiting feels endless and lonely. But God is near to the brokenhearted.

“The Lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit.” — Psalm 34:18 

You are not forgotten. Your pain matters to God, and He promises to save and restore you.

He is also the great healer:

“He heals the brokenhearted and binds up their wounds.” — Psalm 147:3 

Healing is not just a concept but a divine action. God is at work mending what was broken, even in ways you can’t yet see.

And God will complete the good work He has started in you:

“Being confident of this, that He who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus.” — Philippians 1:6 

No matter how long the waiting, no matter how many setbacks you face, God’s faithfulness endures. He is guiding you step by step toward fullness, wholeness, and peace.


The Dawn Is Near

You are standing on holy ground—the night before everything changes. This waiting season is not wasted time but a sacred preparation for the joy, healing, and new beginnings ahead.

Hold on to hope.
Trust in God’s promises.
Rest in His peace.

The morning is coming. And with it, new life.

Monday, June 2, 2025

For the Ones Who Break in Silence, But Still Show Up

For the one who shows up even when no one sees.

For the one who smiles while their heart is breaking.
For the one who holds everyone else together while silently coming undone.

You don’t get medals for this kind of strength.
No standing ovation.
No parade.
But let me tell you: the heavens are watching. And your quiet endurance is a holy kind of song.


The Sacredness of Survival

There’s a hymn that doesn’t get sung in church.
It has no chorus, no harmony.
But it echoes in the soul of every person who’s whispered, “I’ll try again tomorrow.”

It’s the sound of survival.

You’ve walked through days when the weight was too much, and still you rose.
Not with ease, but with courage.
Not because you had to — but because something in you refused to give up.

And that? That’s worship.

“Even though I walk through the darkest valley, I will fear no evil, for you are with me…” – Psalm 23:4

It’s not always about dancing in the light.
Sometimes, it’s about crawling in the dark and trusting that God is still near.


You Kept Going — That’s the Song

You kept showing up.
To work. To dinner. To friendships that didn’t always feel mutual.
To church even when it felt hollow.
To God — even if your prayer sounded more like silence than praise.

You kept going when you were grieving.
When your name wasn’t remembered.
When the help didn’t come.

And maybe no one said thank you.
Maybe no one noticed at all.

But heaven did.

Malachi 3:16 that says:

“Then those who feared the Lord spoke with each other, and the Lord listened to what they said. In his presence, a scroll of remembrance was written to record the names of those who feared him and always thought about the honor of his name.”

There’s a scroll. A remembrance.
For every tear.
Every time you kept walking when you wanted to stop.

You are not forgotten.


This Song Is For the Ones Who…

  • Text back even when they’re tired.

  • Check in on people while feeling unseen themselves.

  • Still show kindness when the world has been anything but kind.

  • Keep believing, even if just by a thread.

This is your song.
A song of resilience.
Of holy perseverance.
Of scars that sing louder than smiles.

“Let us not grow weary in doing good, for in due season we will reap, if we do not give up.” – Galatians 6:9


Even When You Don’t Feel Strong, You Are

You don’t have to roar to be brave.
Sometimes strength is found in a whisper: “I’ll keep going.”

It’s okay if your faith has cracks.
It’s okay if your hope is soft-spoken.
God isn’t waiting for you to be perfect — He’s walking with you in your persistence.

And even if you’ve stopped singing, heaven hasn’t stopped singing over you.

“The Lord your God is with you, the Mighty Warrior who saves. He will take great delight in you… he will rejoice over you with singing.” – Zephaniah 3:17


Keep Going. Not for Applause — but Because It’s Sacred

This life will test your endurance.
But your endurance is a testimony.

Your story may not be wrapped in neat bows or answered prayers yet.
But it’s honest. It’s holy. It’s real.

So this one’s for you —
The ones who rise without recognition.
Who love without loudness.
Who keep going anyway.

You are the quiet heroes.
The ones who sing the kind of songs that only heaven hears.

And friend — you are not alone.

From Wound to Worship: When the Anthem Becomes Your Prayer

Some prayers don’t begin with “Dear God.”

They begin with a sigh.
A tear.
A song you didn’t know you needed — until it met you in the wreckage.

There’s a kind of worship that doesn't come from mountaintops but from hospital beds, gravesides, and quiet rooms filled with unanswered questions. It's the kind that doesn’t raise its hands in triumph — but trembles, broken and still reaching.

This is worship born from wounds.

It doesn’t always rhyme.
It doesn’t always sound pretty.
But it’s real. And that makes it sacred.


When Worship Finds You at Rock Bottom

Pain has a way of stripping away the performative parts of faith.
It silences the platitudes.
It dismantles the “everything happens for a reason” scripts we’ve been fed.

When you’re at rock bottom, worship doesn’t sound like a choir.
It sounds like a whisper:
“God, are You still there?”
“God, please don’t leave me here.”

And yet… that’s the moment when worship becomes most honest.

David knew this ache. In Psalm 6:6, he wrote:

“I am weary with my groaning; all night I make my bed swim; I drench my couch with my tears.”

Yet even then, he prayed.
Even then, he stayed.

That’s not weakness — that’s worship.


From Lament to Lyrics

There are songs that carry us when we can’t carry ourselves.
An old hymn, a modern anthem, a whispered chorus repeated over and over like a lifeline:
“You’re still good.”
“I will trust You.”
“Hold me, Jesus.”

In seasons of suffering, these songs become more than melodies — they become prayers.

Scripture gives us permission to pray like this.
To cry out, to question, to rage — and still turn toward God.

“The Lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit.” – Psalm 34:18

“Out of the depths I cry to you, Lord.” – Psalm 130:1

God doesn’t flinch from our honesty.
He invites it.


The Lie of Strength and the Truth of Surrender

Many of us were raised to believe that worship meant smiling, raising your hands, and leaving your baggage at the door.
But what if worship is bringing that baggage in?
What if true strength is found in surrender, not stoicism?

Grief has taught me this:
God is not impressed by my composure.
He is moved by my honesty.

Jesus Himself wept at a grave (John 11:35).
He sweat blood in Gethsemane.
He cried out on the cross: “My God, why have You forsaken me?”

He didn’t hide His pain.
So why do we?


When the Anthem Becomes Your Prayer

Sometimes the only prayer you can pray is sung.
Not because the words are perfect, but because they meet you in your ache.

I’ve sat in church unable to sing along, not because I didn’t believe — but because I didn’t feel anything.
And yet, a single lyric would break something open in me:
“I will praise before my breakthrough…”
“Even when I don’t see it, You’re working…”
“It is well with my soul…”

That crack in my voice? That trembling confession?
That was worship.

Worship is not a denial of pain.
It’s declaring that pain doesn’t get the final word.


Your Worship Still Counts

If all you can do is show up — that’s enough.
If all you have is a whisper — heaven still hears it.
If all you can offer are tears — they are not wasted.

“You keep track of all my sorrows. You have collected all my tears in your bottle.” – Psalm 56:8

Your pain does not disqualify your praise.
It deepens it.

This is the mystery of wounded worship:
It may not fix the hurt, but it reminds you you’re not alone in it.
It roots you in something eternal.
It points to a God who still sees, still holds, still loves.


Wounded, But Still Worshiping

So tonight —
when the anthem catches in your throat…
when the sanctuary feels hollow…
when your faith feels more like a flicker than a flame…

Know this:
Your worship still matters.
Your wound is not a weakness — it’s an altar.
And your voice, however fragile, is a song of defiant hope.

Let the anthem become your prayer.
Let the pain become your offering.
Let the brokenness become the place where heaven meets earth.

Because from wound to worship,
you are held.
You are heard.
And you are not alone.

Sunday, June 1, 2025

“Believe in Me as I Believe in You”: A Grief Story Set to Tonight, Tonight


“Time is never time at all / You can never ever leave without leaving a piece of youth…”

The Smashing Pumpkins, “Tonight, Tonight”

Some songs find you — not in joy, not in clarity, but in the strange twilight of grief.
In that quiet hour when memory burns and you realize that moving forward isn’t the same as moving on.

“Tonight, Tonight” isn’t just about time or youth or love.
It’s about the holy ache of becoming — through heartbreak, through doubt, through letting go of who you were when the one you loved was still here.

It holds space for the kind of hope that doesn’t sing loud — but whispers steady:
“Believe in me as I believe in you.”


Grief Is a Shape-Shifter

“Our lives are forever changed / We will never be the same…”

No one tells you how much grief keeps evolving.
At first, it’s raw. Visible. A wound everyone notices.

Then it goes underground.
You laugh again, but it doesn’t come from the same place.
You return to daily life, but feel like a ghost in your own story.

You long for who you were — before everything changed.

And yet…

“Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, the new creation has come: The old has gone, the new is here!”
2 Corinthians 5:17

God doesn’t ask you to go back.
He calls you to carry forward — not without pain, but with purpose.


The Loneliness of Being Strong

“The more you change, the less you feel…”

Sometimes the strongest people are the ones who feel most alone.

Because strength, in our world, often looks like silence.
Like showing up when you're breaking.
Like being the steady one — while silently unraveling.

But there comes a moment when the silence gets too loud.
When the people you carried don’t notice you've dropped the weight.
When you realize: maybe you weren’t loved for your heart. Maybe you were loved for how well you held theirs.

“Even my close friend, someone I trusted… has turned against me.”
Psalm 41:9

When you reach that moment, the ache becomes sacred.
Because in the absence of false comfort, you find what’s real.


Belief in the Dark

“Believe, believe in me, believe / That life can change, that you're not stuck in vain…”

It takes faith to keep believing when everything in you is broken.

To trust that change is still possible.
To believe that your story isn’t over.
To let yourself hope — not in a return to what was, but in a renewal of what can be.

“Faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen.”
Hebrews 11:1

The belief that “life can change” isn’t naivety.
It’s spiritual resistance.
It’s defiant hope.
It’s choosing not to let despair write the final line.


The Sacred Act of Holding On

“If you held yourself up to the light…”

Some nights, worship looks nothing like a song.

It looks like standing when you'd rather lie down.
It looks like whispering prayers through clenched teeth.
It looks like simply showing up — even when you’re angry at the heavens.

“Though he slay me, yet will I hope in him.”
Job 13:15

Faith isn’t always beautiful.
Sometimes it’s ugly-cry honesty.
Sometimes it’s asking questions that don’t get answers.

But God does not despise the brokenhearted.
He welcomes the honest.


The Bitterness of Being Forgotten

“The embers never fade in your city by the lake…”

Places hold ghosts.
And when someone you love dies, everything becomes a relic.
The corner booth. The back pew. The scent in the closet.
You want the world to pause and remember with you — but it doesn’t.

And maybe the hardest part of grief isn’t the death itself.
It’s the life that continues as if they never existed.

“I am forgotten as though I were dead; I have become like broken pottery.”
Psalm 31:12

But the embers of memory still burn.
Even when others forget, you remember.
And God remembers too.


Love That Refuses to Leave

“Believe in me as I believe in you…”

That lyric lands like scripture.

Not because it is scripture — but because it echoes the cry of every soul who’s felt abandoned.

It reminds us of Jesus in the Garden, asking the disciples to stay awake with Him — and finding them asleep.
It reminds us that even in divine suffering, the ache of being left is real.

But it also reminds us of God’s belief in us:

“The Lord your God is with you, the Mighty Warrior who saves. He will take great delight in you… He will rejoice over you with singing.”
Zephaniah 3:17


The Impossible Is Possible Tonight

“The indescribable moments of your life tonight / The impossible is possible tonight…”

There is always more.

More healing.
More love.
More hope.

Even when you're not looking for it.

That doesn’t mean the ache disappears.
But it does mean God isn’t done writing your story.

“Behold, I am doing a new thing! Now it springs up; do you not perceive it?”
Isaiah 43:19

Even in the ache…
Even in the unraveling…
Even in the silence…

God believes in you.
And invites you to believe — not just in Him — but in the new beginning He is preparing.

Tonight.

Until I Entered the Sanctuary: Seeing Clearly Again


“But as for me, my feet had almost slipped; I had nearly lost my foothold. For I envied the arrogant when I saw the prosperity of the wicked.”Psalm 73:2–3

Envy doesn’t always show up as greed or coveting. Sometimes, it comes disguised as exhaustion.

You’re doing all the right things — showing up, loving others, praying, trying — and yet, life feels relentlessly hard. Meanwhile, others glide through without a thought of God and seem to flourish.

That’s exactly where Asaph was in Psalm 73. He wasn’t questioning God’s existence — he was questioning God's justice.

“Surely in vain I have kept my heart pure and have washed my hands in innocence.” – Psalm 73:13

If you’ve ever asked, “Why am I struggling while they’re thriving?” you’re not alone.


The Illusion of Prosperity

Asaph looks at the arrogant and the wicked and sees success. They’re healthy, wealthy, carefree. They seem immune to the burdens that weigh others down. It’s infuriating. And it leads him to a near crisis of faith.

“When I tried to understand all this, it troubled me deeply…” – Psalm 73:16

But then something shifts.

“...till I entered the sanctuary of God; then I understood their final destiny.” – Psalm 73:17

Asaph’s perspective didn’t change because their circumstances changed. It changed because his view of reality expanded. He saw beyond the surface — beyond the Instagram feed, beyond the façade of success — and into the eternal.


The Sanctuary as a Lens

It wasn’t until Asaph came into God’s presence that he could see clearly.

There, in the sacred space of worship and reflection, he realized the prosperity of the wicked is not security — it’s slipperiness. It’s fleeting. It's a foundation made of sand.

“Surely you place them on slippery ground; you cast them down to ruin.” – Psalm 73:18

The wicked seem to have everything, but without God, they have nothing of lasting value. Their peace is shallow. Their strength is temporary. Their end is not as enviable as it once seemed.


What We Truly Have

And that realization leads to one of the most beautiful turns in Scripture:

“Yet I am always with you; you hold me by my right hand… Whom have I in heaven but you? And earth has nothing I desire besides you.” – Psalm 73:23, 25

This is the deep comfort we often miss in our moments of comparison:

The wicked may prosper for now, but they do not possess what the faithful have — the unshakeable nearness of God.

What we have is not always material, but it is eternal.

It is presence.
It is peace.
It is purpose.
It is God.


Clarity in the Sanctuary

Psalm 73 reminds us that envy is often born of partial vision. It’s easy to envy the wicked when you only see the first act of the play. But in the sanctuary — whether that’s a church, your car, or your quiet space at home — your vision expands.

You remember eternity.

You remember that presence is more precious than prosperity.

You remember that “God is the strength of my heart and my portion forever.” (Psalm 73:26)

And suddenly, what the wicked have doesn’t look so desirable after all.

Not Every Story Has a Bow: Embracing the Unfinished Lament

We live in a world that loves resolution.

From childhood fairytales to Hollywood films, we’re taught to expect closure.
Conflict builds, tears fall, but by the final act — things make sense.
The pain is redeemed. The hero overcomes. The broken is made whole.

But what if your story doesn’t look like that?

What if you’re stuck in the middle of the sentence —
No closure.
No clarity.
Just questions… and a silence you’re not sure how to name.

What if the ending hasn’t come — and might not come in the way you hoped?

The Psalm with No Resolve

Psalm 88 is often called the darkest chapter in the Bible.
Unlike other Psalms of lament that end with praise, this one doesn’t.
There is no light breaking through the clouds.
No hopeful turn.

It ends not with triumph, but with this haunting line:

“You have taken from me friend and neighbor—darkness is my closest friend.”
— Psalm 88:18 

For many, that verse feels more like real life than most Sunday sermons.

It’s the kind of rawness that makes you pause.

Because here is a man who believes in God enough to cry out,
but who is honest enough to say: I feel abandoned.

And somehow — it made it into Scripture.
Not as a mistake.
Not as an embarrassing outburst.
But as a model of worship.

The Holy Work of Unfinished Prayers

We’ve been conditioned to spiritualize our pain, to find quick theological answers, to wrap hard stories in soft language.

But Psalm 88 teaches us something deeper:
You don’t need to end with a bow for your pain to be valid.
You don’t need resolution to bring your soul to God.

God doesn’t just receive your hallelujahs —
He receives your sobs, your silence, your anger, your ache.

“I am overwhelmed with troubles and my life draws near to death.”
— Psalm 88:3 

That’s not a faithless prayer.
That’s a faith-filled cry from someone who still believes God is listening — even when He feels absent.

When the Bow Is the Burden

For many of us, trying to “find the good” in suffering has become a second grief.
We’re told:

  • “God has a reason.”

  • “This will make you stronger.”

  • “Everything happens for a purpose.”

But not every ache comes with a revelation.
Not every loss turns into a lesson.
Not every broken thing gets fixed this side of heaven.

Trying to force meaning where there is none yet can be exhausting.
And sometimes cruel.

Psalm 88 frees us from that pressure.
It reminds us that lament — even when unfinished — is still sacred.

It reminds us that being faithful does not mean being okay.

God Meets You in the Dark

If Psalm 88 had been edited like a movie, someone would’ve added a final line:
“But God came through and all was well!”

But that would rob us of something beautiful.

Because what Psalm 88 does give us is a portrait of a God who allows us to stay in the dark without turning us away.

You are not disqualified by your sadness.

You are not less spiritual for still waiting on your “happy ending.”

You are not forgotten because your prayers sound more like pleading than praise.

“But I cry to you for help, Lord; in the morning my prayer comes before you.”
— Psalm 88:13 

Even in his despair, the psalmist keeps talking to God.
Even in his darkness, he refuses to let go of the conversation.

That, too, is faith.

When All You Can Do Is Bring It

Here is what Psalm 88 teaches us in the most powerful, gentle way:

God doesn’t ask you to be fixed.
He only asks you to be real.

When you're alone — bring that.
When you're desperate — bring that.
When you're angry — bring that.
When you have no words, just tears — bring those too.

God is not allergic to your sorrow.
He isn’t threatened by your emptiness.
He is not turned off by your confusion.

The only offering required in your darkest moments is honesty.

“The Lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit.”
— Psalm 34:18 

That’s not just poetry. That’s promise.

Let It Be Unfinished

So what if your story doesn’t resolve the way others expect it to?

What if healing takes years — or a lifetime?

What if the grief never fully goes away?

You are still beloved.
Still carried.
Still heard.

The absence of a “bow” does not mean the absence of God.

He is in the middle.
In the unraveling.
In the lament that ends without answers.

Let your story be unfinished.

And let that be holy.

The Lament That Stays Broken — And Still Belongs in the Bible


Darkness is my closest friend.” — Psalm 88:18 

Most psalms end in praise. Even when they begin with sorrow, they tend to pivot at some point — offering a declaration of trust, a promise to praise, or at the very least, a glimmer of hope.

But not Psalm 88.

Psalm 88 is different. It’s the one psalm that offers no neat resolution, no uplifting refrain, no redemption arc. It begins in anguish and ends in silence. And for anyone who’s ever battled depression, deep grief, or the feeling of divine abandonment — it’s holy ground.


An Honest Cry in a World of Quick Fixes

In a culture — and often a church — that prioritizes positivity, quick recovery, and victorious testimonies, Psalm 88 feels like a disruption. A necessary one.

It says: You’re not alone if you’re still in the middle of it.
It says: You don’t have to pretend to be okay when you’re not.
It says: God can handle your raw, unresolved pain.

The psalmist writes:

“I am overwhelmed with troubles and my life draws near to death...
You have put me in the lowest pit, in the darkest depths.”
— Psalm 88:3,6 

This is not sanitized sorrow. It’s an unfiltered cry from the pit — a kind of prayer we don’t often hear in Sunday sermons, but desperately need.


What God Really Requires of Us

What makes Psalm 88 so powerful is not just its honesty, but its direction.

Even in the psalmist’s agony, he still turns to God. He doesn’t hide his despair or clean up his language. He doesn’t wait until he feels hopeful to pray. He just comes — broken, bitter, undone.

“Lord, you are the God who saves me;
day and night I cry out to you.”
— Psalm 88:1 

This teaches us something deeply important: God does not demand emotional perfection. He does not require a polished prayer life to receive our pain. He does not ask for strength when we have none left to give.

What He asks for is presence.
What He honors is honesty.

You don’t have to feel full of faith to talk to God. You don’t have to feel brave. You don’t even have to feel hopeful. You only have to be willing to bring your pain to Him.

And that, Psalm 88 shows us, is enough.


When Collapse Is the Beginning of Healing

The quiet collapse doesn’t look dramatic.

It looks like unanswered texts.
Like canceled plans.
Like finally saying “no” without an essay of apologies.

It looks like rage that was buried under years of “being nice.”
Like grief that had no room to breathe under the weight of caretaking.

But here’s the sacred truth:
Your breaking point isn’t a failure.
It’s a beginning.


Boundaries Aren’t Bitterness — They’re Birth

You begin to learn that boundaries aren’t rejection — they’re survival.
That resting isn’t laziness — it’s repair.
That being unavailable to dysfunction is the healthiest thing you’ve ever done.

You stop setting yourself on fire to keep others warm.
You stop measuring your worth by how much you can carry.
You stop apologizing for the space you take up.

You start reclaiming your voice —
Not the filtered one people liked.
But the one that says what’s true, even if it’s not convenient.


You Were Never Meant to Be the Hero of Everyone Else’s Story

You are not selfish for needing rest.
You are not mean for saying no.
You are not broken for reaching your limit.

You are human.
Holy.
Held.

And strong doesn’t mean unbreakable.
Sometimes, the strongest thing you’ll ever do
is fall apart —
and finally, begin again.