I Speak Your Language!

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Ouch! That Hurts God!

 

Pic from Magnific.com

Healing What Hurts: Even Mature Christians Need God's Comfort

One of the biggest misconceptions in the church is that spiritual maturity eliminates emotional pain.

Somewhere along the way, many believers begin to think that if their faith is strong enough, they won't hurt anymore. They assume that mature Christians should always be smiling, always be strong, and always have the perfect answer when life gets difficult.

But that's not what we see in Scripture.

The truth is that mature believers still experience heartbreak. They still cry. They still grieve. They still wrestle with disappointment. They still need God's comfort.

Strong Faith Doesn't Mean You Don't Feel Pain

Many of us grew up hearing phrases like, "Just pray about it," or "You need more faith."

While prayer and faith are essential, they were never intended to replace the healing process. God never told us to ignore our pain. He invites us to bring it to Him.

Even King David, a man after God's own heart, poured out his emotions before God.

Psalm 34:18 (KJV) says:

"The Lord is nigh unto them that are of a broken heart; and saveth such as be of a contrite spirit."

Notice that God doesn't avoid brokenhearted people. He draws near to them.

That means your pain isn't pushing God away. It's creating an opportunity for you to experience His presence in a deeper way.

Church Hurt Hits Different

Let's keep it real.

Some of the deepest wounds don't come from strangers. They come from people we trusted. Sometimes they come from family members, friends, spouses, or even fellow believers.

You can be serving, praying, tithing, and showing up faithfully while carrying invisible scars that nobody knows about.

The person sitting next to you in church may be praising God while quietly grieving a loss. The prayer warrior may be fighting depression. The ministry leader may be battling loneliness. The strong friend may secretly need someone to check on them.

That's why we should never assume that someone's smile tells their whole story.

Jesus Understands Emotional Pain

When people talk about healing, they often focus on physical healing. But Jesus understands emotional suffering too.

He was rejected. He was misunderstood. He was betrayed by someone in His inner circle. He experienced grief. He experienced sorrow.

Isaiah 53:3 describes Him as:

"A man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief."

If Jesus Himself experienced sorrow, we shouldn't feel ashamed when we experience it too. The difference is that Jesus didn't allow pain to separate Him from the Father.

Neither should we.

God's Comfort Is More Than Sympathy

When God comforts us, He's not simply saying, "I'm sorry you're hurting." His comfort brings strength. His comfort restores perspective. His comfort reminds us that our story isn't over.

2 Corinthians 1:3-4 (KJV) says:

"Blessed be God... the Father of mercies, and the God of all comfort; Who comforteth us in all our tribulation..."

Notice the word "all." Not some. Not a few. All.

The heartbreak. The disappointment. The anxiety. The grief. The betrayal.The silent battles nobody else sees. God specializes in healing what hurts.

Healing Requires Honesty

One reason many believers stay wounded is because they never acknowledge the wound. We say we're blessed when we're actually broken. We say we're good when we're actually struggling. We quote Scripture while avoiding the healing process.

But God can't heal the pain we refuse to surrender. Healing begins when we stop performing and start being honest with God. Sometimes your most powerful prayer isn't a polished sermon. Sometimes it's simply: "Lord, this hurts."

And that's enough.

God Can Heal What People Can't See

Not every wound leaves a scar on your skin. Some wounds hide behind smiles. Some hide behind ministry.Some hide behind success. Some hide behind social media posts that make everything look perfect.

But God sees beyond the image. He sees every tear that never fell. Every prayer you whispered. Every disappointment you never discussed. Every battle you fought in silence.

And He has not forgotten you.

Final Thoughts

If you're hurting today, don't measure your faith by the absence of pain. Measure it by your willingness to bring that pain to God. Mature believers need God's comfort just as much as new believers do. The difference is that maturity teaches us where to take our hurt. 

Healing is not pretending the wound doesn't exist.Healing is placing the wound in the hands of the Great Physician and trusting Him with the outcome.

God still heals bodies. God still heals minds. God still heals hearts. And He is still healing what hurts.

"He healeth the broken in heart, and bindeth up their wounds." — Psalm 147:3 (KJV)

So let me ask you this:

What area of your life have you been asking God to strengthen when He may actually be inviting you to let Him heal it? Don't be afraid to take it to Him. ☝🙏

Thursday, June 11, 2026

5 Biblical Ways to Remove Negative People from Your Life

5 Biblical Ways to Remove Negative People From Your Life

Not every person who enters your life is assigned to stay there. Some people come as blessings, some come as lessons, and some come as distractions. Learning how to separate yourself from negative influences is not about being hateful, unforgiving, or “thinking you’re better” than anyone else. It is about protecting the peace, purpose, and growth that God placed inside of you.

Even Jesus understood the importance of boundaries. He loved people, but He did not give everyone unlimited access to Him. Here are five biblical ways to remove negative people from your life.

1. Recognize the Fruit They Produce

Scripture: Matthew 7:16 (KJV)
“Ye shall know them by their fruits. Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles?”

One of the first steps in removing negativity is paying attention to patterns, not promises. People can say the right things, apologize repeatedly, and make big claims about changing, but their consistent actions reveal what is truly in their hearts.

A negative person may constantly bring drama, gossip, fear, confusion, jealousy, or discouragement into your life. This does not mean they are worthless or that God cannot change them. It means you have to recognize what their presence is producing in your own spirit.

Ask yourself: “When I leave conversations with this person, do I feel drained or strengthened? Do I feel closer to God or pulled away from my purpose?”

God wants us to be wise about what we allow to influence our hearts.


Scripture: Proverbs 4:23 (KJV)
“Keep thy heart with all diligence; for out of it are the issues of life.”

Your heart is valuable. Your peace is valuable. Your calling is valuable. Setting boundaries is not being cruel; it is being responsible with what God has entrusted to you.

Sometimes we keep unhealthy relationships because we confuse access with love. We think saying “no” means we do not care. But even Jesus walked away from certain situations when people rejected truth or tried to interfere with His assignment.

You can love someone and still limit their access to you. You can pray for someone and still decide they cannot continue disturbing your peace.

Boundaries are not walls of bitterness. They are doors with locks that you control.

3. Stop Trying to Change People Who Refuse to Change

Scripture: 2 Timothy 3:5 (KJV)
“Having a form of godliness, but denying the power thereof: from such turn away.”

Some people know how to look good on the outside but refuse to deal with what is happening inside. They may talk about growth, healing, and change, but their actions remain the same.

A hard lesson in life is realizing that you cannot drag someone into transformation. Only God can change a heart.

Your assignment is not to become exhausted trying to rescue people who are committed to staying in the same cycles. Sometimes the most loving thing you can do is step away and allow someone to experience the consequences of their choices.

God can reach places you cannot.

4. Protect Your Peace by Choosing Your Circle Wisely

Scripture: 1 Corinthians 15:33 (KJV)
“Be not deceived: evil communications corrupt good manners.”

The people around you influence your mindset, emotions, habits, and even your faith. You may start questioning your purpose, lowering your standards, or accepting things you once prayed to overcome simply because of constant exposure.

Your circle matters.

If you are trying to heal, grow, and become who God called you to be, you cannot constantly surround yourself with voices that tear down everything God is building.

Sometimes elevation requires separation.

Not because you hate people — but because you understand that everything cannot go with you into your next season.

5. Forgive Them, But Release Them

Scripture: Ephesians 4:31-32 (KJV)
“Let all bitterness, and wrath, and anger, and clamour, and evil speaking, be put away from you… And be ye kind one to another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as God for Christ’s sake hath forgiven you.”

Removing negative people does not mean carrying hatred toward them. Forgiveness is how you free your own heart.

Forgiveness does not always mean restoring the same relationship. Sometimes forgiveness means releasing the anger, releasing the pain, and releasing the expectation that someone will become who you wanted them to be.

You can forgive someone and still move forward without them.

God does not call you to live trapped by someone else’s dysfunction. He calls you to walk in freedom.

Final Thought

Not everyone deserves a front-row seat to your life. Some people may have been connected to your past but are not assigned to your future.

Pray for them. Forgive them. Love them from a distance if necessary.

Your peace is not selfish. Your healing is not selfish. Your purpose matters.

Sometimes removing the wrong people creates room for God to bring the right ones.

Monday, June 8, 2026

Grateful for Grace!

 I don't say this lightly: God's grace has carried me farther than my strength ever could.

When I look back over my life, I see moments where I should have been counted out, moments where my decisions weren't always the best, and seasons where I didn't have all the answers. Yet somehow, God kept showing up. Not because I deserved it, but because that's who He is.

The truth is, I know I'm not worthy of all the mercy, favor, and opportunities He has placed in my life. That's what makes grace so powerful. It's a gift that cannot be earned. It's God's love reaching beyond my failures, shortcomings, and imperfections.

Ephesians 2:8 says, "For by grace you have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God."

That's my testimony. I have seen doors open that I didn't have the qualifications for. I've experienced peace in situations that should have broken me. I've watched God make a way when there wasn't one visible. Time after time, He has proven faithful.

There are days when I wonder why God continues to bless me the way He does. There are moments when I realize that if it had been left up to my own ability, I would have missed what He had prepared for me. But grace stepped in. Grace covered me. Grace kept me.

Psalm 103:10 reminds us that God "does not treat us as our sins deserve or repay us according to our iniquities." Thank God for that.

I may never fully understand the depth of God's faithfulness. I may never be able to explain why He chooses to love us so relentlessly. What I do know is that His grace is real. I've lived it. I've seen it. I've been sustained by it.

So today, my heart is full of gratitude. Not because life has been perfect, but because God has been faithful through it all. Every lesson, every victory, every breakthrough, and even every setback has revealed His hand at work.

If you're in a difficult season, don't give up. The same grace that carried me is available to you. God's faithfulness is not dependent on your perfection. His grace is sufficient, His mercy is new every morning, and His love never fails.

I am grateful. I am humbled. And I will never stop thanking God for a grace I could never earn but have been blessed to receive.

Ouch! That Hurts God!

  Pic from Magnific.com Healing What Hurts: Even Mature Christians Need God's Comfort One of the biggest misconceptions in the church is...