How Are You Feeling+FollowTo anyone who feels angry at God—and ashamed of it I never said I was angry at God. I told myself it was disappointment. Or confusion. Anything that sounded more respectful. But anger has a way of staying, even when we rename it. That’s why Jeremiah matters so much to me. In Jeremiah 20, the prophet doesn’t whisper his frustration. He accuses God of misleading him. He curses the day he was born. And then—he keeps talking to God anyway. Jeremiah’s anger didn’t cancel his calling. It existed inside it. If you feel anger toward God today, you’re not crossing a line. You’re standing where a prophet once stood—still speaking, because the relationship is real enough to hold truth. #AngerAtGod #Jeremiah #BiblicalLament #EmotionalFaith #ChristianHonesty112Share
How Are You Feeling+FollowWhen praying feels meaningless, you’re not alone Some nights, I opened my Bible and prayed the same words again, expecting the same silence. I wondered if God had stopped listening. Then I noticed David in Psalm 13. He begins by asking, “How long, O Lord?” He doesn’t pretend to feel hope. He names despair openly. In Hebrew, his words are precise: questioning, not rebelling. If prayer feels heavy today, you are in good company. The Bible shows that even those closest to God sometimes pray through exhaustion—and their words are still sacred. #PrayerFatigue #David #Psalm13 #FaithAndEmotion #BiblicalLament81Share
How Are You Feeling+FollowTo anyone who feels emotionally exhausted by prayer I didn’t stop praying. I just stopped expecting anything to change. That’s when I finally understood biblical lament. In Hebrew, lament is not emotional release. It is structured persistence. Many laments repeat the same complaints, almost word for word. Not because the writer lacks faith—but because nothing has shifted yet. The Bible keeps those prayers. It doesn’t edit them for optimism. If prayer feels repetitive, heavy, or empty right now, Scripture suggests this: you may not be spiritually cold. You may be enduring longer than you ever expected to. #PrayerFatigue #BiblicalLament #SpiritualEndurance #FaithAndEmotion #ChristianDepth111Share
DidYouKnow+FollowGod never said good believers stop feeling angry. Anger is often treated as a spiritual failure. Something mature faith should grow out of. But the Bible never says that. In Scripture, anger appears inside prayer, not outside of faith. The psalms do not whisper. They protest. That matters, because many older believers learned to convert anger into silence. Toward leaders. Toward injustice. Toward God himself. But silence is not holiness. And anger, when spoken honestly, is not rebellion. The Bible does not erase anger. It gives it language. If anger still rises in you after all these years, that does not mean faith failed. It may mean your faith is still alive enough to respond. #BibleMisconceptions #FaithAndAnger #BiblicalLament #ChristianLife #DidYouKnow551Share
DidYouKnow+FollowGod never said strength means silence. Many believers were taught that strong faith stays quiet. Does not complain. Does not raise its voice. But the Bible is loud. The psalms argue. Prophets protest. Faith speaks when something is wrong. That matters, because older believers often learned to swallow anger. At leaders. At systems. At unanswered prayers. Silence felt safer than honesty. But Scripture never praises silence that protects injustice. It praises truth spoken without surrender. Lament is not disrespect. It is engagement. If you feel anger toward God or the church, that does not mean you lost faith. It may mean you still care enough to speak. #BibleMisconceptions #BiblicalLament #FaithAndAnger #ChristianLife #DidYouKnow652Share
How Are You Feeling+FollowTo anyone who feels emotionally abandoned by God Nothing terrible happened. God just felt… absent. Then I reread Psalm 22 more slowly. Before hope appears, David says, “Why are you so far from saving me?” In Hebrew, the phrase implies distance, not rejection. God isn’t gone—He’s silent. Scripture makes room for that difference. Silence is not the same as abandonment. If God feels distant today, you’re not imagining things—and you’re not condemned for noticing. David noticed it too, and his words are still considered Scripture. #FeelingAbandoned #Psalm22 #David #FaithAndSilence #BiblicalLament211Share
How Are You Feeling+FollowTo anyone who feels emotionally tired of praying I didn’t stop praying. I just stopped expecting anything from it. Then I learned something about the word lament. In Hebrew, lament isn’t emotional release—it’s persistence. It assumes God is still listening, even when hope is thin. Many biblical prayers don’t end in confidence. They end in exhaustion. And Scripture preserves them anyway. If prayer feels heavy right now, you’re not failing spiritually. You’re praying the kind of prayers the Bible chose to keep. #PrayerLife #BiblicalLament #SpiritualFatigue #FaithAndEmotion #ChristianEndurance170Share