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Friday, June 5, 2026

How Could One Cultivate Healthy Mental Habits To Keep From Slipping Into Depression Or Anxiety When Faced With Stressful Situations?

When stress hits, and the first thought is, “Why does this always happen to me?” I’ve learned that the question is usually the doorway into a spiral, not into wisdom. The Bible doesn’t pretend stress is imaginary, but it does tell me what to do with it: “Be anxious for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known to God” (Phil 4:6–8). That’s not denial; that’s direction. It’s me admitting I am not in control and putting the burden where it belongs: “Cast your burden on the LORD, and He shall sustain you” (Ps 55:22), “casting all your care upon Him, for He cares for you” (1 Pet 5:7). 

For years, I looked at circumstances alone and ignored the providential hand of God. When we do that, we live as if life is random, and randomness is terrifying because then everything depends on performance, approval, and outcomes we can’t guarantee. Scripture corrects that thinking: “Trust in the LORD with all your heart, and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct your paths” (Prov 3:5–6). That verse doesn’t remove responsibility; it removes panic. It teaches me how to move while I’m waiting, and how to wait without falling apart. 

One of the biggest mental habits I’ve had to learn is to slow down before I react. Anxiety loves speed: fast conclusions, fast assumptions, fast “I must fix this now.” But the Word tells me to guard the inward life because everything flows from it: “Keep your heart with all diligence, for out of it spring the issues of life” (Prov 4:23). So I try to take a breath and ask: Is this really going to matter next month, next year, or am I treating a moment like it’s a lifetime? 

This is where Scripture aligns with critical thinking. When my mind starts making a case for danger, I don’t just obey the feeling; I test the thought. The Bible says there is a battle in the mind, and it’s not optional: “bringing every thought into captivity to the obedience of Christ” (2 Cor 10:5). That means I challenge the “should statements,” the catastrophizing, and the doom conclusions with what is true and steady. “Whatever things are true… noble… just… pure… lovely… of good report… meditate on these things” (Phil 4:8). 

A healthy mental habit is also learning what peace actually is. Jesus didn’t promise a stress-free world; He promised His presence and His peace: “Peace I leave with you, My peace I give to you… Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid” (John 14:27). That lines up with the promise, “You will keep him in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on You, because he trusts in You” (Isa 26:3). When my mind is stayed on God, it doesn’t mean I never feel pressure it means pressure doesn’t get to be my master. 

Another habit is refusing to extend today’s stress into tomorrow’s imagination. Jesus said it plainly: “Do not worry about tomorrow… Sufficient for the day is its own trouble” (Matt 6:34). When I keep dragging tomorrow into today, I’m trying to live two days at once, and that will crush anyone. Instead, I try to bring today back under God’s care, one decision, one conversation, one task at a time. “My times are in Your hand” (Ps 31:14–15). 

I also have to set boundaries when stress is high, because some environments and inputs are gasoline on anxiety. Late-night thinking is rarely holy thinking, and it usually turns into a courtroom in my head. At those times, the wiser move is to stop, pray, and go to sleep, trusting the Lord to carry what I can’t carry. “Whenever I am afraid, I will trust in You” (Ps 56:3), and “The LORD is on my side; I will not fear” (Ps 118:6). 

And I want to say this gently: if someone is slipping toward depression or anxiety, there is no shame in admitting you need help. Even David said, “Why are you cast down, O my soul?… Hope in God” (Ps 42:5), and the Lord invites the weary, “Come to Me… and I will give you rest” (Matt 11:28–30). Sometimes that help is a trusted believer, a pastor, a counselor, or a doctor—because God uses means, and humility is not weakness. The goal is not to become a person who never feels stress; it’s to become a person who knows what to do with stress the moment it shows up. 

If I had to put it simply: we cultivate healthy mental habits by training our thoughts, strengthening our prayer life, and learning to wait with faith rather than panic. “Be transformed by the renewing of your mind” (Rom 12:2) is not a slogan—it’s a path, and it takes repetition. The world trains us to rehearse fear; Scripture trains us to rehearse truth. Over time, that changes us. 

 

#ChristianCounseling #BiblicalEncouragement #AnxietyHelp #MentalHealthMatters #RenewYourMind #FaithOverFear #PrayerLife #Philippians4 #Proverbs3 #PeaceOfGod #Overthinking #ChristianLiving 

 

Book: I Cannot Give You What I Do Not Have: Finding Unconditional Love in Christ

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GQB4MJYW

 

Study Guide: I Cannot Give You What I Do Not Have: Companion Study Guide: Healing Generational Wounds Through 40 Devotions

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0H33MHYMY

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Thursday, June 4, 2026

What Does The Bible Say About The Role Of Mothers Giving Up Careers To Raise A Family? And Is It Frowned Upon For Mothers To Stay Home And Raise Their Children Rather Than Work Outside The Home?

Motherhood, Work, and Wisdom: What the Bible Actually Prioritizes

 

I don’t believe the Bible “frowns” on a mother staying home to raise her children; quite the opposite. Scripture treats children as a sacred trust, not an inconvenience or an accessory. “Children are a heritage from the LORD” (Ps. 127:3–5), and the home is one of the primary places where faith, character, and wisdom are formed. That means motherhood, whether at home full-time or working outside the home, is not small work. It’s shaping the future. 

When I read passages like Titus 2:3–5, I hear a clear priority: older women are to help younger women love their husbands and children, and be wise stewards of the home. That doesn’t read like a punishment to me. It reads like a calling to protect a family and keep “the word of God” from being dishonored. First Timothy 5:14 speaks similarly about “managing the house.” And Proverbs 14:1 says, “The wise woman builds her house.” The Bible isn’t trying to reduce a woman. It’s trying to protect what is most fragile and most valuable: marriage, children, and the spiritual climate of the home. 

At the same time, Scripture also refuses to flatten a woman into a stereotype. Proverbs 31 is one of the clearest examples. The virtuous woman isn’t portrayed as lazy or powerless. She’s active, productive, and wise; she works with her hands, manages resources, considers a field and buys it, plants a vineyard, and her “children rise up and call her blessed” (Prov. 31:10–31). Notice what makes her “virtuous” in the passage: it’s not whether she has a job title outside the home. It’s that her life strengthens her household, her husband can trust her, kindness is on her tongue, and the home is cared for with honor. That picture can include economic activity, but it never treats career as the identity that replaces family. 

So I try to answer this question with one simple biblical principle: the issue isn’t “career vs. home”; it is priorities and stewardship in this season. Deuteronomy 6:6–7 is painfully simple and very demanding: God’s words are to be in our hearts, and we’re to teach them diligently to our children in the ordinary flow of life: sitting at home, walking by the way, lying down, and rising up. That kind of steady shaping takes time, presence, and intentionality. Proverbs 22:6 points the same direction: “Train up a child in the way he should go.” You don’t outsource that without incurring costs, even when outsourcing is necessary. 

Now let me say this clearly, because people get crushed right here: a mother who has to work should not be condemned. Period. Some families truly need two incomes. Sometimes health issues, job loss, debt, a single-income limitation, or a season of rebuilding makes that unavoidable. We’re not saved by a household arrangement; we’re saved by the grace of God. And even the Bible’s positive pictures of motherhood include women doing hard things in hard seasons. Jochebed nursed Moses and then released him into a dangerous situation, trusting God’s providence (Exod. 2:7–10). Hagar wept in the wilderness when provision ran out, and God heard and provided (Gen. 21:14–21). Those are not “easy living” stories. Those are survival stories, yet God was present, and God cared. 

So if a mother is working because she must, the question becomes: How do we protect the child’s heart and the family’s spiritual life while we do what we must? Second Timothy 3:14–15 reminds us that Timothy knew the Holy Scriptures “from childhood,” and that faith was passed through generations (2 Tim. 1:5). That didn’t happen by accident. It happened because someone mother, grandmother, household kept the Word in front of him. A working mom can still disciple her children, but she’ll need support and structure. That’s not shame; that’s wisdom.

For the mother who wants to stay home and feels condemned for it, I’d say: do not let the world shame you for investing in your children. Scripture honors that investment. “Your wife shall be like a fruitful vine… your children like olive plants all around your table” (Ps. 128:3). That’s not a small vision. That’s a vision of fruitfulness and stability. And for the mother who wants to work and feels condemned for it, I’d say: do not let anyone act like God can only bless one kind of household schedule. The question is whether the home is being managed with wisdom, love, and moral clarity and whether husband and wife are united, not divided. 

And this is where the husband/father cannot disappear. Scripture places responsibility on fathers too. “Bring them up in the training and admonition of the Lord” (Eph. 6:4), and “do not provoke your children, lest they become discouraged” (Col. 3:20–21). That is not a “mom only” command. If a mother is home, father still leads and serves. If a mother works, father still leads and serves. Either way, he must not dump the spiritual burden onto her while he pursues comfort. A household needs a spiritual leader, a provider, a listener, a lover, and a father who understands that children are not an interruption to life; they are life. 

One more caution, because it matters: we must not turn family life into a man-made treadmill of performance. I hear what you’re saying about the pressure of endless activities and the pursuit of a “perfect path” for the child. The Bible doesn’t tell us to build our children into little idols, or to sacrifice peace, worship, and family unity on the altar of achievement. We teach, we train, we guide, we protect, but we also remember that children are God’s first, not ours. Hannah loved her son deeply, yet she still said, “For this child I prayed… therefore I also have lent him to the LORD” (1 Sam. 1:27–28). That’s a mother with faith and a long view. 

So no, staying home to raise children isn’t something Scripture frowns upon. And no, working outside the home, when necessary or wisely chosen, is not something Scripture condemns either. The Bible keeps pulling us back to what matters: presence, training, stewardship, unity in the marriage, and a home that is built with wisdom (Prov. 14:1). In the end, a mother choosing to raise and disciple her children is not “less than.” It is weighty, holy work. And a mother working to help keep the household steady should not carry shame as if she is failing her children. The question is not what the culture applauds. The question is what best serves the family God has entrusted to you right now and how you can do it in faith. 


Book: I Cannot Give You What I Do Not Have: Finding Unconditional Love in Christ

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GQB4MJYW

 

Study Guide: I Cannot Give You What I Do Not Have: Companion Study Guide: Healing Generational Wounds Through 40 Devotions

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0H33MHYMY

How Has Your Perspective On Forgiving Someone Who Really Hurt You Changed Since Becoming A Christian?

Forgiveness After Deep Hurt: What Changed When I Became a Christian

 

Before I came to Christ, I didn’t really understand forgiveness the way the Bible means it. I thought forgiveness was mostly about whether the other person deserved it, whether they apologized, and whether I felt safe again. And if I’m honest, I wanted an apology, I wanted to be understood, and I wanted some sense that the wrong was acknowledged. I didn’t know how dangerous it was to carry a debt in my heart. 

After coming to Christ, my perspective changed because I learned what God did with my debt. Scripture says, “Be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as God in Christ forgave you” (Eph. 4:32). And it says, “even as Christ forgave you, so you also must do” (Col. 3:13). That “even as” is the turning point. God didn’t forgive me because I was worthy; He forgave me because He is merciful and because Christ paid what I could not (Rom. 5:8–10; Eph. 1:7; Col. 2:13–14). When that starts sinking in, forgiveness stops being a personality trait and becomes obedience and worship. 

 

What Forgiveness Became After Christ 

The biggest change is this: forgiveness is no longer mainly about the other person; it’s about my spiritual health and my freedom. Hebrews warns us about “any root of bitterness springing up” and defiling us (Heb. 12:14–15). I’ve learned the hard way that bitterness doesn’t stay contained. It leaks into our body, our sleep, our relationships, our peace, and our prayers. It can turn our hearts cold. 

So now, when someone hurts me deeply, I try to do what Scripture tells me to do: I release vengeance to God. “Beloved, do not avenge yourselves… ‘Vengeance is Mine, I will repay,’ says the Lord” (Rom. 12:19). That does not mean the wrong wasn’t wrong. It does not mean the pain didn’t matter. It means I’m refusing to poison myself while waiting for the other person to finally “get it.” 

 

Forgiveness Is Not The Same As Access

Another major change since becoming a Christian has been learning the difference between forgiving someone and giving them access to my life again. Forgiveness is commanded (Matt. 6:14–15; Mark 11:25; Luke 6:37). But trust and access are rebuilt over time and through fruit. Jesus taught forgiveness, but He also taught wisdom. 

When people refuse repentance, when there’s manipulation, when someone keeps harming you, love doesn’t mean you keep standing in front of the same punch. Forgiveness is releasing the debt; boundaries are refusing further harm. We can forgive and still say, “I can’t allow you to keep doing this to me.” That’s not bitterness; that’s stewardship of your soul. 

 

Forgiveness Is A Process, Not A One-Time Mood 

For me, forgiveness has been both a decision and a process. Jesus told Peter we forgive “up to seventy times seven,” and then He gave the parable of the unforgiving servant (Matt. 18:21–35). That parable teaches me something sobering: when I refuse to forgive, I’m not just holding them; I’m holding myself. I’m keeping the debt alive inside me. 

And when the memories come back, that’s when I have to forgive again in my heart. Not because God didn’t work, but because pain has echoes. That’s why Scripture keeps pointing us back to tenderness and compassion (Eph. 4:31–32), and why it warns us not to let Satan take advantage of us; we’re “not ignorant of his devices” (2 Cor. 2:10–11). One of his devices is to keep us trapped in the replay. 

 

The Cross Changed What “Hurt” Means 

Whenever I start thinking, “Yes, but you don’t know what they did,” I go back to Christ. Jesus was reviled and did not revile in return; He “committed Himself to Him who judges righteously” (1 Pet. 2:21–23). On the cross He said, “Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they do” (Luke 23:34). Stephen echoed the same spirit: “Lord, do not charge them with this sin” (Acts 7:60). That doesn’t minimize evil; it reveals a different kind of strength. 

And the story of Joseph helps me when life feels unfair. He didn’t pretend the betrayal wasn’t betrayal. He said it plainly: “You meant evil against me,” but then he anchored the whole thing in God’s providence: “but God meant it for good” (Gen. 50:19–21). That verse doesn’t erase trauma; it keeps trauma from becoming a throne. 

 

A Gentle Warning I Have To Tell Myself 

If we don’t forgive, we don’t stay “neutral.” We drift into bondage. Hatred stirs up strife, but love covers sins (Prov. 10:12). Love “thinks no evil” (1 Cor. 13:4–5). And when I keep repeating a matter, I separate what could have been healed (Prov. 17:9). That is why I say forgiveness is a matter of life and death not always physical death, but the death of peace, the death of joy, the death of tenderness, the death of spiritual clarity. 

So my perspective changed since becoming a Christian because now I understand this: God is not asking me to call evil “good.” He’s asking me to release the debt into His hands, so my soul can live free. 

If you’re searching phrases like “how to forgive someone who hurt you,” “Christian forgiveness after betrayal,” “how to let go of bitterness,” “forgiveness vs boundaries,” or “forgiving when they never apologize,” I hope this helps. 

  

#Forgiveness #ChristianCounseling #BiblicalCounseling #Healing #Bitterness #Boundaries #ChristianLiving #Faith #Grace #Mercy #Reconciliation #SpiritualGrowth #BibleStudy #ChristCentered #EmotionalHealing 

 

Book: I Cannot Give You What I Do Not Have: Finding Unconditional Love in Christ 

I Cannot Give You What I Do Not Have: Finding Unconditional Love in Christ

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GQB4MJYW

 

Study Guide: I Cannot Give You What I Do Not Have: Companion Study Guide: Healing Generational Wounds Through 40 Devotions

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0H33MHYMY