Doubt vs. Certainty
Throughout the years, I’ve had people look at me sideways for expressing doubt when it comes to religion. Some were bothered by it, as if doubting meant disrespect. But for me, doubt is not only natural—it’s necessary. I’ve never seen doubt as weakness. I’ve seen it as the beginning of true faith.
After studying world religions, ancient philosophies, and the stories we’ve told for thousands of years, it’s almost impossible for me not to question things. I don’t say that to be rebellious or to reject anyone’s truth. I say that because when you look at the scale of history, and the depth of human experience, it becomes clear that no one path could possibly hold all the answers. Not when we’ve been walking this Earth for over 300,000 years, and most modern religions have only been with us for two or three thousand. That’s not even 1% of our human story.
So yes—I have doubts. But I also have faith.
I have faith in God.
I have faith in a Creator.
I have faith that what we do matters, that when we do good, good comes back. And when we do wrong, it finds its way back to us too.
I have faith in the soul—ours, each other’s, and the one that connects us all.
I have faith that this life is more spiritual than it is physical.
I have faith that we’ve been guided, inspired, and visited by souls sent to remind us of who we really are.
I believe that God breathes in each of us, and that the words of Jesus weren’t just a call to worship—they were a call to action. “You too can do these things,” He said. And I believe that.
I’ve read sacred texts from temples and churches, from lands near and far, from voices across cultures and centuries. And through all of them, I’ve found gold. I’ve seen the Divine woven into the poetry of scripture, the rhythm of chants, and the silence between words. I’ve drawn so much light from these teachings—more than the shadows that sometimes come with organized belief.
I still love to read scripture. I still love to study religion. But I don’t study to be right. I study to grow. I study to remember. And I speak about my doubts so others don’t feel ashamed of theirs. Because for a long time, I did.
What I don’t believe in is using religion as a weapon. I don’t believe in the claim that one way is the only way, and that everyone else is doomed. That never felt like God to me. That felt like man.
Still, I believe there’s something deeply beautiful in organized religion when it comes from a pure place. Community. Ritual. Service. We need community. We need one another to evolve. To heal. To become who we were always meant to be.
So no—I don’t believe doubt is the opposite of faith. I believe it’s part of the path to deeper faith. I believe what really matters is not just what we believe, but why we believe it. The posture of our hearts when we practice it. And whether our beliefs make us better humans—not just louder ones.
Because at the end of the day, the true power of faith isn’t in claiming to have all the answers.
It’s in learning to live the questions with love, with humility, and with hope.

Great work. I have been reading your write-ups, they’re inspiring and usually touch the deep aspects of reasonable life. I love the Christian views and the general spiritual connections with the physical world. Thanks and keep it going.
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Thank you so much for the feedback. I truly enjoy working out these questions of life. Stay inspired my friend
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