OneWordStudy+FollowWhat If I Don’t Feel God Anymore? This is one of the most searched questions among older Christians. And one of the least answered honestly. The Hebrew word yada means to know—not to feel. It describes relationship built through history. Feelings fluctuate. Knowledge remains. The Bible never equates God’s presence with emotional warmth. It ties it to faithfulness over time. If God feels distant, Scripture does not accuse you. It anchors you. You may feel less. But you know more than you realize. #FeelingGod #HebrewBible #FaithAndEmotion #ChristianLife #SpiritualMaturity115Share
OneWordStudy+FollowLoneliness Isn’t a Lack of Faith. It’s a Biblical Condition. You can be faithful, married, active in church—and still feel deeply alone. That confusion often comes with shame. Yet Genesis describes Adam as “alone,” before sin entered the world. The Hebrew badad means separated, isolated, singular. Loneliness is not always a spiritual problem to fix. Sometimes it’s a human condition to be acknowledged. If your later years feel quieter than you expected, emptier than sermons prepared you for— you’re not broken. The Bible doesn’t rush to correct loneliness. God sits with it first. #Loneliness #BiblicalTruth #FaithAndEmotion #OlderChristians #SpiritualCompanionship271Share
How Are You Feeling+FollowTo anyone who feels emotionally distant from God I didn’t stop believing in God. I just stopped feeling close to Him. That distance scared me more than doubt ever did. That’s why I think about Isaiah in chapter 6. Before the calling, before the mission, Isaiah becomes painfully aware of the distance between himself and God. He doesn’t feel connected—he feels exposed. Overwhelmed. Unworthy. The Bible doesn’t rush past that moment. God doesn’t tell Isaiah to try harder or feel better. He closes the distance Himself. If God feels far away today, Scripture doesn’t accuse you of drifting. Sometimes distance is not disobedience—it’s the space where God moves toward you first. #FeelingDistant #Isaiah #FaithAndEmotion #SpiritualDistance #BiblicalComfort155Share
How Are You Feeling+FollowTo anyone who feels lonely even though they believe Loneliness is confusing when you have faith. You start wondering if you’re doing something wrong—because shouldn’t belief fill this gap? David didn’t think so. That’s why he keeps saying, “How long, O Lord?” Not once. Not twice. Over and over. In Hebrew, the phrase signals prolonged isolation, not a bad day. David was surrounded by people, songs, rituals. And still, he felt alone enough to say it out loud to God. If faith hasn’t cured your loneliness, Scripture doesn’t accuse you. It agrees with you. And it gives you language so you don’t have to sit in that feeling by yourself. #LonelinessInFaith #Psalms #David #SpiritualIsolation #FaithAndEmotion584Share
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
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