How Are You Feeling+FollowTo anyone who feels lonely even in church I was surrounded by people. And still felt unseen. Then I paid attention to David—not as king, but earlier. Before the crown, he keeps saying one thing in the Psalms: “Look at me.” The Hebrew verb implies urgency, not self-pity. It’s the cry of someone present, yet overlooked. The Bible never assumes community automatically heals loneliness. Even David felt isolated while worshiping among others. If church hasn’t cured your loneliness, you’re not broken. You’re experiencing something Scripture already understands—and names without shame. #LonelinessInFaith #Psalms #David #ChristianLife #SpiritualIsolation276Share
The Verse You Skipped+FollowPsalm 88 ends without hope. And that matters. Psalm 88 is strange. No praise at the end. No turnaround. Just darkness. I wanted to skip it. But that’s exactly why it stayed with me. This psalm gives language to pain that doesn’t resolve quickly. It reminds me that faith doesn’t always sound hopeful. God allowed a prayer with no happy ending to be part of Scripture. That tells me something important: my darkest prayers still belong here. #BibleStudy #TheVerseYouSkipped #Psalms #Lament #FaithAndPain #ScriptureReading471Share
How Are You Feeling+FollowTo anyone who feels angry—and scared of that anger I wasn’t afraid of God leaving. I was afraid of what I might say if I were honest. Then I read the Psalms of David more carefully. Some of them don’t ask politely. They accuse. They demand answers. In Hebrew poetry, these are not lapses—they’re intentional forms of prayer. Anger, in Scripture, isn’t faith breaking apart. It’s faith refusing to go silent. If anger is sitting heavy in you today, you don’t need to hide it. The Psalms suggest God would rather hear your protest than your performance. #ChristianLament #Psalms #AngerInFaith #BiblicalPrayer #EmotionalTruth230Share