Where Doubt Meets God

In the Stillness with God

It was late.
The kind of late where the world exhales and leaves a man alone with himself.

He sat with the Scriptures open on his lap, but his eyes were not reading. They were searching inward.

“Lord,” he whispered, “is it faithless to question You?”

The silence did not feel empty. It felt attentive.

“I have been told that doubt is weakness. That if I truly believed, I would not wrestle. But I wrestle with passages. With doctrines. With the fear that maybe I believe what I believe because it is familiar, not because it is true.”

His voice thinned.

“Sometimes I feel ashamed. As if certainty is the badge of a real believer and I misplaced mine.”

The quiet deepened. Then, not as thunder, but as clarity, a response formed.

God:
“Wrestling is not the absence of faith. It is the evidence that you are still holding on.”

He swallowed.

“But Thomas doubted.”

God:
“And did My Son withdraw from him?”

He saw it in his mind. The wounds extended. The invitation given.

“No.”

God:
“He met him in the doubt.”

The man exhaled.

“And the father who said, ‘I believe, help my unbelief’?”

God:
“I made sure his prayer would never be forgotten.”

A long pause lingered.

“Then faith and struggle can live in the same heart?”

God:
“Faith is born precisely where sight runs out.”

He thought of the Psalms. The accusations. The grief. The why.

“You left those in Scripture too.”

God:
“I am not threatened by your honesty.”

His thoughts shifted.

“Why then does it feel dangerous to explore? To read other traditions? Buddhism. Taoism. Hinduism. Why does curiosity feel like betrayal?”

God:
“To examine is not to bow. You may seek without surrendering your discernment.”

“But Paul warned about philosophy.”

God:
“He warned about captivity, not contemplation.”

The words settled slowly.

“You are not afraid of comparison?”

A still warmth answered.

“Truth does not fear investigation.”

He felt courage rise, then another weight followed.

“What troubles me most is exclusivity. Billions born into other cultures. If I had been born elsewhere, I would likely believe differently. Am I Christian because it is true or because it is near?”

The air felt heavy with sincerity.

“You are shaped by geography,” the voice replied, “but truth is not.”

“It feels unjust that only one path could be right.”

“Then ask yourself,” the voice said gently, “are you questioning My justice or human certainty about it?”

He hesitated.

“Both.”

A memory surfaced. Abraham asking, Will not the Judge of all the earth do right?

“You are inviting me to trust Your character.”

“Yes.”

Silence again.

“There is more,” he admitted. “When I read Jesus, something awakens. It feels alive. But when I read certain other passages, I struggle. Sometimes even Paul feels… different. I wonder if Jesus meant to found a religion at all. Maybe He was simply revealing a way of being.”

The response came slowly.

“You are noticing tone and emphasis. That is not the same as contradiction.”

He leaned forward.

“When Jesus speaks, it feels inward. Like the Kingdom is within.”

“And also among you.”

He smiled faintly.

“Was He pointing to the path? Or claiming to be it?”

A pause.

“Yes.”

He almost laughed. “That is maddening.”

“He embodies what He teaches. And He teaches what He embodies.”

His face grew serious.

“But did He claim uniqueness? I can accept Him as enlightened. As the clearest reflection of You. But categorically divine? The only incarnation? That feels… immense.”

The silence did not rush him.

“You believe all bear My image.”

“Yes.”

“And that He bore it without distortion.”

“Yes.”

“That is coherent,” the voice said. “But it is not the whole of what He claimed.”

The weight of that settled.

“He did not merely say, ‘I found the light.’ He said, ‘I am the light.’ He did not only announce a way. He spoke as its center.”

His thoughts churned.

“So either He is uniquely who He claimed to be, or He is not.”

“Yes.”

“And if He is only enlightened?”

“Then the cross becomes inspiration, not reconciliation. The resurrection becomes metaphor, not invasion of death. Salvation becomes self-realization, not restoration.”

He sat with that.

“What do I do with this tension?”

“Remain. Do not flee tension prematurely. Growth often lives there.”

Tears pressed at his eyes.

“I do not want to abandon Him.”

“You have not.”

“I also do not want to pretend certainty.”

“Then do not pretend. Stay honest.”

His breathing steadied.

“Am I wrong to see wisdom in others? In Buddha. In Lao Tzu?”

“Wisdom is scattered generously across humanity. But identity claims are not interchangeable.”

“So this comes down to who Jesus truly is.”

“Yes.”

Another long silence.

“You wrestled Jacob,” he whispered.

“And renamed him Israel.”

A realization dawned.

“So perhaps wrestling is not rejection. Perhaps it is initiation.”

A softness filled the room.

“Names are given to those who stay.”

He closed the Scriptures gently.

“If I stripped away doctrine wars, fear, pride, cultural inheritance, and asked only, ‘Do I trust Jesus?’”

The answer rose not from argument, but from somewhere quieter.

“Yes.”

The voice spoke once more.

“Then walk with Him. Let your questions refine you, not erode you. Faith is not the absence of tension. It is loyalty in its midst.”

The room fell still again.

And in that stillness he understood something deeper than answers. Faith was not a fortress of certainty. It was a relationship sustained by trust. The wrestling had not distanced him from God. It had drawn him closer, like Jacob clinging through the night. Doubt had not been a doorway out. It had been a doorway in.

He did not possess airtight theology. He possessed a Person he could not quite let go of.

And perhaps that was the truest confession of faith he had ever made.

8 thoughts on “Where Doubt Meets God

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  1. I am very open about my doubts not only for me to work them out but also because I feel others have them but they do not feel comfortable admitting it and I think it’s okay

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  2. Exceptional insights you’ve shared here, Jimmy, and I very much appreciate your honesty. In answer to that question about other religions and why God would insist on only way to heaven, I oncee heard a speaker explain that such a question comes from wanting God to accept OUR way(s) of attaining heaven (mostly through good deeds), and not accepting THE way He ordained (through believing in His Son, Jesus, John 3:16). Only one way is necessary, and God established that way before time began, revealing it to Adam and Eve (although cryptically) shortly after they sinned (Genesis 3:16). GOD gets to decide who enters His heaven, based on His master plan, as revealed in the Bible.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. A great dialogue! Never stop asking questions! The truth stands alone and is not intimidated by questions. Religion is sometimes threatened by questions because of what has been added on to the truth!

    We all have our,”My God, my God, why have you forsaken me!” moments!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I am very open about my doubts because I have built my relationship with God by wrestling and most importantly I know many other people feel the same but they don’t feel they can dial Daniel in public and they feel ashamed and that can cause so many issues

      Like

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