How Are You Feeling+FollowTo anyone who feels forgotten by God over time Years passed. And nothing dramatic happened. Then I noticed how long Simeon waited. Scripture doesn’t rush his story. Decades are compressed into one quiet sentence. Faith, here, isn’t rewarded with speed—but with presence. The Bible takes aging seriously. It knows waiting can stretch into a lifetime. If you feel overlooked by God because time has passed, you’re not alone. You’re standing inside one of Scripture’s longest silences—and God still stepped into it. #WaitingOnGod #FaithOverTime #Simeon #ChristianAging #BiblicalHope121Share
DidYouKnow+FollowThe Bible never says faith removes fear. Many believers think fear is evidence of weak faith. If you truly trusted God, fear would disappear. But Scripture says otherwise. Over and over, God says, “Do not fear.” Not because fear is sinful—but because it is expected. Courage in the Bible is never the absence of fear. It is obedience while fear is present. That matters, especially for older believers facing aging, illness, and loss. Fear shows up quietly: fear of decline, fear of being a burden, fear of dying alone. And with it comes shame. But fear does not disqualify faith. It gives faith something to walk through. If fear still visits you in this season of life, that does not mean trust is gone. It means you are still human—and still choosing to walk. #BibleMisconceptions #FaithAndFear #ChristianAging #BiblicalTruth #DidYouKnow15712Share
DidYouKnow+FollowGod never promised you would feel useful forever. We often assume usefulness equals value. Serve more. Produce more. Lead more. But Scripture ties worth to being, not output. Jesus spends time with the sick, the aged, the overlooked. Not because of what they can offer, but because presence itself matters. That matters, because many older believers quietly ask: “Do I still matter if I cannot do what I used to?” The Bible never suggests usefulness is the goal of faith. Love is. And love does not expire when productivity does. If this season feels slower, smaller, or less visible, that does not mean your purpose ended. It may mean your worth no longer needs to prove itself. #BibleMisconceptions #ChristianAging #FaithAndPurpose #SpiritualWorth #DidYouKnow654Share
DidYouKnow+FollowThe Bible never promises your strength will be enough. We love the phrase “God won’t give you more than you can handle.” It sounds empowering. It sounds responsible. But it is not biblical. Paul actually writes the opposite. He says they were burdened beyond their strength, and despaired of life itself. Why would Scripture admit that? Because faith was never meant to prove your toughness. It was meant to expose your limits. That matters, especially for older believers who were taught to endure quietly. You survived wars, losses, illnesses, disappointments—without complaint. And now you feel tired, and ashamed of the tiredness. But the Bible does not honor self-sufficiency. It honors dependence. Grace enters where strength ends. Not before. If life finally feels like more than you can handle, that may not be failure. It may be the first honest place faith was always meant to live. #BibleMisconceptions #GraceOverStrength #ChristianAging #FaithAndWeakness #DidYouKnow494Share