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Tuesday, May 26, 2026

What’s The Best Mental Approach To Deal With Rejection?

The Best Mental Approach to Rejection Is Remembering Who We Belong To 

 

The best mental approach to rejection starts with one decision: I will not let a human response become the final verdict on my value. That sounds simple, but it is one of the hardest disciplines in life, because rejection doesn’t just touch our emotions; it threatens our sense of worth. For me, the first step is to properly frame rejection. Rejection is not always a statement about my character. Sometimes it is a statement about expectations. Sometimes it is a statement about timing. Sometimes it is a statement about values. And sometimes it is simply a statement about another person’s limitations, blindness, or pain. If I don’t frame rejection, I will personalize it, and then I will start living like a slave to approval, chasing that hamster wheel of “not enough.” 

 

1) Separate Correction From Rejection 

One of the most freeing things I can do is ask: Was I corrected, or was I rejected? Correction can be a gift even when it stings because it can make me better. Rejection, on the other hand, can be nothing more than someone choosing not to align with me, not to understand me, or not to value what I’m offering. If I confuse the two, I will either become defensive when I should grow, or crushed when I should keep moving. Scripture doesn’t teach me to live fragile. It teaches me to live rooted. Jesus said the storms will come, but the life that holds is the one built on rock, hearing His words and doing them (Matt 7:24–27). That means when rejection hits, I don’t run to panic; I run to foundation. 

 

2) Anchor Identity In God’s Acceptance, Not People’s Approval 

This is where I have to be honest: people-pleasing is a trap. It looks like humility, but it is often fear: fear of man, fear of losing status, fear of being disliked, fear of being left. Scripture warns me plainly: if I still live to please men, I cannot live as Christ’s servant (Gal 1:10). The mental shift is this: I don’t need everyone to approve of me if God is for me. Romans 8 doesn’t speak softly; it speaks like a fortress. If God is for us, who can be against us? Who can bring a charge? Who can condemn? And who can separate us from the love of Christ? (Rom 8:31–39). Rejection is real, but it is not ultimate. Human rejection can hurt me, but it cannot define me because God’s love is not fragile, and His grip is not weak (Rom 8:31–39; Heb 13:5–6). 

 

3) Expect Rejection If You Follow Christ, Don’t Be Shocked By It 

A major part of staying steady is learning not to be surprised. Scripture tells us, “Do not think it strange concerning the fiery trial” (1 Pet 4:12–14). Jesus told us plainly: if the world hates you, remember it hated Him first (John 15:18–20). This matters because many people collapse under rejection because they didn’t expect it. They assumed following God would mean smooth roads and universal applause. But Jesus lived rejected, misunderstood, and opposed, yet He did not lose stability because He knew who He was, why He came, and where He was going. If I remember that, I stop treating rejection like an emergency and start treating it like something the Lord can use: either to refine me or redirect me

 

4) Rejection Can Become A Refining Tool Or A Root Of Bitterness 

Rejection can do two things: 

·      It can shape me into someone wiser, stronger, and humbler, or 

·      It can poison me, turning into bitterness, cynicism, and isolation. 

 

The danger is not just the rejection itself; it’s what I do with it afterward. If I replay it, ruminate on it, compare myself, and build false stories in my head, I am giving rejection more power than it deserves. So I have to respond with discipline: renew my mind (Rom 12:2), refuse anxiety (Phil 4:6–7), and bring my heart back under God’s care (1 Pet 5:6–7; Ps 55:22). If my father and mother forsake me, the Lord will take care of me (Ps 27:10). That is not poetry to me it’s survival. 

 

5) Practical Steps That Keep Me Steady After Rejection 

Here’s what helps me in real life, not just in theory: 

·      Stop replaying the moment. I don’t need to rehearse pain to honor it. 

·      Return to routine. Sleep, work, writing, responsibilities life doesn’t end because someone rejected me. 

·      Pray and release the weight to God. He is my refuge and strength (Ps 46:1–3). 

·      Ask: Is this rejection a redirection? Sometimes God closes doors to keep me from wasting years. 

·      Keep moving forward. “Do not grow weary while doing good” (Gal 6:9). 

·      Set boundaries when needed. If a relationship has become caustic to my walk with Christ, it may need distance, not hatred, not revenge, but wisdom. And when rejection is tied to righteousness when people revile you or exclude you because you belong to Christ Scripture does something shocking: it calls that blessed (Matt 5:10–12; Luke 6:22–23). Not because pain feels good, but because it proves alignment. 

 

Closing

So the best mental approach to rejection is not pretending it doesn’t hurt. It is placing rejection inside the larger truth: God is with me, God is for me, God is shaping me, and God will finish what He started. And if I can hold that, I can live steadily prepared for the unexpected because I have come to know the God who goes before me, walks beside me, and holds me up when I stumble (Isa 41:10; Josh 1:9; Rom 8:31–39). 

 

#Rejection, #ChristianEncouragement, #BiblicalCounseling, #FaithOverFear, #Romans8, #PeoplePleasing, #IdentityInChrist, #MentalHealthAndFaith, #RenewYourMind, #Prayer, #HopeInChrist, #Perseverance 

Sunday, May 24, 2026

Why Some People Grow Through Struggles—and Why Others Quit Too Soon

Why do some people grow through struggles while others give up? In this opinion, the difference often comes down to what we ascribe to the struggle. Some people see hardship as meaningless punishment, and they collapse under it. Others, sometimes with the same pain, and sometimes with even worse pain, eventually begin to see that the struggle can produce something in them that comfort never could. That does not mean suffering is good. It means God can use what is painful to build something that lasts. I also want to say this carefully: this is not true in the same way for every person or every situation. Across history, many people tragically end their suffering by ending their lives. Others survive and then turn around and help people who are drowning because they do not want anyone else to suffer the way they suffered. 

 

1) What “Struggle” Does To Us Depends On What We Believe It Means 

Most of us do not feel a sense of growth while we are in the middle of a trial. We feel alone. We feel stuck. We feel like tomorrow will be the same as today, as it was yesterday. That hopeless loop is one of the first warning signs that a person is giving up on the inside. But Scripture gives us a different framework: trials test faith, and testing produces patience (James 1:2–4). And Paul lays it out like a chain reaction: tribulation produces perseverance; perseverance produces character; and character produces hope (Rom 5:3–5). That hope is not make-believe. It is rooted in God’s love being poured into our hearts by the Holy Spirit (Rom 5:5). When I can see my trial through that lens, I stop interpreting pain as “God forgot me,” and I start seeing it as training, sometimes slow, sometimes painful like a Father shaping His child (Heb 12:7–11). 

 

2) Why Some People Give Up: Drift Starts Before The Fall 

Giving up can look like a person taking their life, and that is heartbreaking. But giving up can also look like someone numbing out, isolating, turning cold, or walking away from God because they believe God is no longer interested in them personally. A lot of times the drift begins with simple neglect: I stop praying. I stop taking in the Word. I stop fellowshipping with believers. Then doubt grows because I am not feeding truth. And once doubt takes root, deception is not far behind (Heb 3:12–14). Sin hardens. Hopelessness thickens. The person starts living by sight rather than by faith (2 Cor 4:16–18). Jesus even warned that some receive the Word with joy, but because there is no root, they endure only a while; then tribulation comes, and they stumble (Matt 13:20–21). 

 

3) Why Some People Grow: Identity And Meaning Keep Them Standing 

I believe perspective and identity are huge. Many believers do not understand who we are in Christ, what He has accomplished for us, and what it means that God calls us His and that He is not finished with us. That is where the accuser gains ground, because we start believing we are disqualified instead of disciplined, rejected instead of refined. But Scripture keeps pulling us back: God knows the way that I take; when He has tested me, I shall come forth as gold (Job 23:10). And sometimes the affliction itself becomes a teacher: “It is good for me that I have been afflicted, that I may learn Your statutes.” (Ps 119:71). Paul says outwardly we may be perishing, but inwardly we can be renewed day by day (2 Cor 4:16). And when we stop staring only at what is seen, we remember that what is unseen is eternal (2 Cor 4:17–18). That is not denial. That is direction. 

 

4) Expectations Can Crush Us—Or They Can Be Surrendered 

Expectations are some of the most damaging thoughts we allow into our minds. People-pleasing makes us chase acceptance like a hamster on a wheel. Even worse, we chase our own impossible standards, thinking, “If I achieve this one thing, then I’ll be okay.” And when we finally reach it, we move the goalpost again. The biblical view steadies me because it tells me plainly: hardship is part of this life, but Christ does not leave us alone in it. Jesus said, “In the world you will have tribulation; but be of good cheer, I have overcome the world.” (John 16:33). And God’s grace does not show up only after I become strong. It shows up in weakness (2 Cor 12:9–10). 

 

5) Community Is Not Optional For Endurance 

We are not meant to endure alone. The Bible says Exhort one another daily so we are not hardened by the deceitfulness of sin (Heb 3:12–14). Some people make it because they stay connected to people who genuinely care for them and pull them back to truth when their thinking gets dark. Others isolate, and isolation becomes the place where lies sound like wisdom. 

 

6) What I Want To Say To The Person Who Feels Like Quitting 

If you are at that place right now, I want to speak plainly: it is almost always too early to quit. Patience does not feel spiritual when we are in pain, but patience is where faith becomes real. God gives power to the weak, and those who wait on the Lord renew strength (Isa 40:29–31). And if you have fallen, I want you to hear this: “Though he fall, he shall not be utterly cast down; for the Lord upholds him with His hand.” (Ps 37:23–24). A righteous man may fall seven times and rise again (Prov 24:16). That is not permission to live carelessly. That is a reason not to drown in despair. 

Here is what I believe: all of life is preparation for the opportunity to be used of God for His glory and purposes. And to be used by God for His glory is one of man’s greatest honors. 

Friday, May 22, 2026

Is it Rational to Believe in God?

Is It Rational to Believe in God? A Plain Answer for People Who Want Something Sensible

 

Yes, I believe it is rational to believe in God, especially when I compare it to the alternative. In my mind, it takes more faith to believe that everything we see came from nothing, that order came from chaos, and that human beings are just random accidents with no real meaning. The Bible pushes back on that thinking and says creation itself is already “speaking” if we will slow down and listen (Ps 19:1–4). Paul says the same thing: what can be known of God is “clearly seen” in what has been made (Rom 1:19–22). And I also want to say this plainly: the word “rational” matters here. When most people ask this question, they are not asking for a religious pep talk. They are asking if belief in God is reasonable, logical, and sensible. I believe it is. 

 

What I Mean By “Rational” 

When someone says “Is it rational,” I hear: “Is it reasonable to believe this? Does it make sense? Can I hold this belief without checking my brain at the door?” Scripture never tells us to shut our minds off. God literally says, “Come now, and let us reason together” (Isa 1:18). We are also told to be ready to give a reason for our hope, but with meekness and fear, not arrogance (1 Pet 3:15). That means Christianity is not scared of questions. Also, the Bible doesn’t treat unbelief as “superior intelligence.” It calls it spiritual blindness and moral darkness when we refuse to glorify God or be thankful (Rom 1:21–22). That does not mean every unbeliever is stupid. It means the human heart can be deeply resistant to the truth, even while the mind tries to sound sophisticated. 

 

Evidence, Certainty, And The Faith We All Live By 

One thing I try to say without attacking anyone is this: we all live by faith every day. Not “religious faith,” but trust. I sit in a chair, unable to explain engineering. I get on a plane without understanding the physics of lift. I trust what I have seen to be reliable. Over time, evidence builds certainty even when I do not understand every invisible law at work. The Bible teaches something similar about God: faith is not pretending. Faith is responding to what is true. “Faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the word of God” (Rom 10:17). And Hebrews says that if I come to God at all, I must believe He is and that He rewards those who diligently seek Him (Heb 11:6). That is not blind faith. That is relational trust based on what God reveals. 

 

Common-Sense Reasons I Believe God Exists 

For me, it starts with the obvious things we all live inside of every day: Creation and design. The heavens declare God’s glory (Ps 19:1–4). When I look at the moon and the stars and realize I am tiny, the question is not whether something is there; it is what kind of Someone is behind it (Ps 8:3–4). Job even says, “Ask the beasts… speak to the earth… who does not know that the hand of the Lord has done this?” (Job 12:7–10). 

Conscience and moral law. Even people who deny God still argue about right and wrong. Romans says the work of the law is written on the heart, and conscience bears witness (Rom 2:14–15). That matters, because if we are only accidents, why does “should” even exist? Why do human rights matter? Why does evil feel evil? 

Purpose and eternity. Ecclesiastes says God put eternity in our hearts (Eccles 3:11). That is exactly what we experience. We can eat, work, earn, buy, and still feel empty. Something in us is crying out that there is more than this. 

 

The Hardest Obstacle: Unanswered Prayer And God’s Timing 

If I am honest, one of the biggest “rational” struggles is unanswered prayer. But I do not interpret unanswered prayer as “God is absent.” I interpret it as: God is God, and I am not. Sometimes I ask for things I do not understand. Sometimes I ask for things that would actually harm me. Sometimes I ask for things that would only feed my flesh. James says people can ask “amiss,” wanting to spend it on their pleasures. That is a real issue. So what does God do? He shapes us. He leads us to trust Him, not just use Him. And He invites us to seek Him with our whole heart (Jer 29:13; Deut 4:29). Jesus Himself said, “Ask… seek… knock” (Matt 7:7–8). Not because God enjoys withholding, but because relationship is deeper than instant results. 

 

Jesus Christ: Not An Idea, A Person In History 

For me, this is where it becomes even more rational. Christianity is not just “God exists.” Christianity says God stepped into history in the Person of Jesus Christ. When I look at Jesus His life, His words, His authority, His compassion, His miracles, His endurance at the cross I do not see a mere teacher. I see someone who lived like He knew where He came from and where He was going. And prophecy matters to me here. The Bible is not shy about saying God knows the end from the beginning. Jesus’ life aligns with what God had promised long before. That is part of why I cannot dismiss Scripture lightly. Even Thomas needed to see. Jesus met him where he was, then said something that still pierces me: “Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed” (John 20:29). And then Jesus’ resurrection did not remain private; His disciples preached openly, at cost to themselves. That matters. 

 

Evil, Suffering, And The Value Of Free Will 

People often say, “If God is real, why is there evil?” I understand that question. But here is what I believe: love requires choice, and choice requires the possibility of rebellion. God did not create us as robots. Our free will and our temptations reveal what we truly love. Yet even in suffering, God does not abandon us. He forms endurance, character, and hope. And He promises the day will come when what is temporary will be swallowed up by what is eternal. That is why I can say this: I can survive the evil of this world, with God’s help, and I can still trust Him. Evil is not proof God is absent. It is proof something is broken, and we need redemption. 

 

A Personal Word From Me 

When I look at my own life, I do not deserve to be alive, but I am. And because I am, I feel a responsibility to speak about what God has done in me and through me. I may not be everything I want to be, but I am not what I once was. So yes, belief in God is rational to me, because the alternative cannot explain conscience, love, meaning, purpose, or the deep hunger in us for eternity. And the gospel does not just explain life. It changes lives. If you truly want to test this, Scripture says, “Test all things; hold fast what is good” (1 Thess 5:21). Acts praises the Bereans because they searched the Scriptures daily to find out whether things were so (Acts 17:11). God is not threatened by honest seeking.