How Are You Feeling+FollowTo anyone who feels guilty for doubting I thought doubt meant my faith was cracking. That if I were stronger, these questions wouldn’t still be here. Then I looked again at Thomas. He doesn’t ask for abstract proof. He asks for something personal—to see, to touch. And Jesus doesn’t dismiss him. He meets him there. Thomas isn’t remembered as “the failed disciple.” He’s remembered as someone who needed honesty before belief could settle. If doubt is part of your faith right now, you’re not falling away. You may simply be refusing to pretend—and Scripture treats that as a form of integrity. #FaithAndDoubt #Thomas #BiblicalTruth #ChristianQuestions #SpiritualGrowth350Share
How Are You Feeling+FollowTo anyone who feels guilty for doubting I thought doubt meant something was wrong with me. That faith should have erased these questions by now. Then I noticed Thomas is never corrected for doubting. Jesus responds to what Thomas asks for—evidence. In Greek, Jesus doesn’t shame him. He meets him exactly where the doubt lives. The Bible distinguishes between disbelief and unfinished belief. Doubt isn’t rejection. It’s a faith that hasn’t landed yet. If questions are following you today, you’re not faithless. You’re still reaching. #FaithAndDoubt #Thomas #BiblicalTruth #ChristianQuestions #SpiritualGrowth90Share