DidYouKnow+FollowTo anyone who feels disappointed after doing everything right I stayed faithful. I prayed. I showed up. I didn’t walk away. And still, the outcome hurt. That’s why Job’s middle chapters matter more than his ending. Job keeps insisting there’s a mismatch between his faithfulness and his suffering. He’s not claiming perfection. He’s naming a gap. The Bible never tells him that gap is imaginary. If you feel disappointed today—not because you rejected God, but because you trusted Him—Scripture says this gently: your pain doesn’t mean your faith failed. It means you took God seriously. #FaithAndDisappointment #Job #BiblicalDepth #LongFaith #ChristianHonesty31Share
How Are You Feeling+FollowTo anyone who feels disappointed with God after doing everything right I did what I was taught to do. I stayed faithful. I prayed. I showed up. I didn’t walk away when it got hard. And still, things didn’t turn out the way I hoped. That’s why the story of Job matters more to me now than it ever did before. Not the beginning. Not the ending. But the middle—where Job keeps saying he didn’t do anything to deserve this. In Hebrew, Job’s language is careful. He isn’t claiming perfection. He’s saying there is a gap between faithfulness and outcome. The Bible never corrects him for noticing that gap. God responds later, but He never says Job imagined the unfairness. If you feel disappointed today—not because you rejected God, but because you trusted Him—Scripture tells you this: disappointment is not rebellion. It is often the cost of taking faith seriously for a long time. #FaithAndDisappointment #Job #BiblicalDepth #LongFaith #ChristianHonesty15227Share
How Are You Feeling+FollowTo anyone who feels disappointed with God but won’t say it I never said I was angry with God. Anger felt too aggressive. What I felt was quieter than that. Disappointment. Then I noticed how Moses speaks in Numbers 11. He doesn’t curse God. He tells Him, plainly, “Why have you treated your servant so badly?” In Hebrew, it’s not poetic. It’s blunt. Administrative. Almost tired. Scripture doesn’t treat Moses as rebellious here. It treats him as overwhelmed. Disappointment, in the Bible, is often the voice of someone who stayed faithful longer than they had strength for. If you feel let down today, you’re not betraying God. You’re standing where many faithful people stood—still speaking, because the relationship is real enough to risk honesty. #FaithAndDisappointment #Moses #BiblicalHonesty #ChristianDepth #EmotionalFaith40Share