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 #SpiritualMaturity116Share
DidYouKnow+FollowGod never said your faith must stay the same. We often assume real faith is unchanging. That doubt, shifts, or fatigue mean decline. But faith in the Bible matures by changing shape. Abraham’s faith looks different at the end than at the beginning. Peter’s faith after failure is quieter, humbler, and deeper. That matters, because many older believers feel uneasy about how their faith has changed. Less certainty. More questions. More nuance. But Scripture never calls evolving faith betrayal. It calls it growth under weight. Faith that has lived through decades cannot look young forever. If your faith no longer feels simple, that does not mean it weakened. It may mean it survived. #BibleMisconceptions #FaithJourney #SpiritualMaturity #ChristianReflection #DidYouKnow5110Share
DidYouKnow+FollowGod never said your faith should be impressive. We often treat faith like a performance. Strong. Confident. Public. Certain. But Jesus repeatedly points to quiet faith. Small faith. Desperate faith. Faith that reaches out because it has nothing else left. That matters, because older believers often feel invisible. Their faith no longer looks dramatic. No big testimonies. No new beginnings. Just endurance. But the Bible never measures faith by volume. Only by direction. Faith that clings is not inferior to faith that conquers. It is simply older. If your faith now looks quieter than it used to, that does not mean it shrank. It may mean it stopped performing—and started surviving. #BibleMisconceptions #FaithJourney #SpiritualMaturity #ChristianReflection #DidYouKnow975Share