I said it out loud for the first time.
“I sometimes feel like I don’t fully trust God.”
I had never said those words before.
Not because I didn’t feel them.
But because I was afraid to.
Afraid that saying it out loud
would make it more real.
Afraid it would mean something about my faith
that I didn’t want to be true.
So I kept it quiet.
But when I finally said it—
just plainly, without trying to soften it—
something unexpected happened.
I felt relief.
Not because I suddenly had all the answers.
Not because everything shifted in that moment.
But because I wasn’t carrying it alone anymore.
And I started to understand something.
It wasn’t that I didn’t trust God.
It was that I didn’t trust myself
to let go.
To release the things I’ve been holding so tightly—
the hurt,
the worry,
the fear,
the need to understand what will happen next.
Because letting go feels like losing control.
But the truth is,
I was never holding control to begin with.
And maybe that’s what I’m learning.
That honesty doesn’t weaken my faith.
It brings it into the light.
And when it’s there—
it doesn’t hold the same weight it did in the dark.
“I do believe; help me overcome my unbelief!”
— Mark 9:24 (NIV)
God knows but He still wants us to communicate with Him about what things are plaguing us and weighing us down…just like a loving earthly parent wants their child to lean on them, cry on their shoulder when they need to even if they want their child to have faith in what they as a parent may be handling behind the scenes in secret, wanting their child to gain the strength obtained only by taking something on seemingly by their own initiative. He wants that open relationship with His child like you want your own to run crying to you when their heart is hurt. So your saying that openly was the natural response of a child who knows their Heavenly Father is all powerful but also doubts their own strength. He’s always open to encourage you when you let him know you need it.
LikeLiked by 1 person