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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.  

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

How Can I Make Sure That My Commitment To Christ Remains Firm?

Staying Firm When I’m Not Perfect: How I Keep My Commitment to Christ 

 

If I’m honest, the struggle for all of us is that we fall short of the ideal we see in the life of Christ. I look at Jesus, and I see what firm, steady, faithful obedience looks like. And then I look at myself, and I feel the gap. Part of why that gap feels so heavy is because Jesus was not just “a better version of me.” Jesus is God manifest in the flesh. He lived a perfect life, and while He experienced real temptation, He was not ruled by a sinful nature the way we are. He came from the Father, lived with full clarity of His purpose, and returned to the Father. That matters. 

Meanwhile, we are born in sin, we still wear a body of sinful flesh, and even though the Holy Spirit indwells us, we can still be weak, forgetful, and easily led astray. That reality is not an excuse, but a sober explanation of why hypocrisy weighs so heavily on our conscience. When the Spirit convicts us, we feel it, because we know our words and our life are not always aligned (Prov 4:23). So when I ask, “How do I keep my commitment firm?” I’m not asking how to become sinless overnight. I’m asking how to stay steady, how to keep getting back up, how to stop drifting, and how to live one life in private and in public. 

 

What “Firm” Really Means In Real Life 

For me, “firm” means my life is not divided. I don’t want a version of me for church, a version of me for my family, a version of me for my friends, and a version of me when nobody is watching. I want alignment. I want the integrity of the upright to guide me (Prov 11:3). I want my commitment to look like consistency, imperfect but real. Scripture doesn’t define firmness as never being tested. It defines firmness as being rooted, built up, and established(Col 2:6–7), steadfast and immovable (1 Cor 15:58), holding fast without wavering because God is faithful (Heb 10:23), and continuing in the faith, grounded and steadfast (Col 1:23). 

 

The Early Warning Signs Of Drift 

Before the “big fall,” the drift usually begins quietly. 

For me, the warning signs are simple: 

·      Prayer starts fading. 

·      The Word starts fading. 

·      Fellowship starts fading. 

And then my inner life starts going soft. That’s how sin becomes deceitful. That’s why Scripture warns us about “an evil heart of unbelief in departing from the living God,” and why it tells us to exhort one another “Today,” so we don’t get hardened (Heb 3:12–14). Drift hardens us slowly, then we wake up wondering how we got so far away from Christ. 

 

What Triggers The Drift 

A lot of times it’s not some grand rebellion. It’s the daily pressures that wear us down. I use a simple tool: HALT: hungry, angry, lonely, tired. When I’m living there, my thinking gets weak. And when my thinking weakens, my choices weaken. That’s why Scripture keeps pulling us back to watching, standing fast, being brave, and being strong (1 Cor 16:13). Not in our own strength, but in the Lord (Eph 6:10–18). 

 

Weakness Vs. A Pattern Of Compromise 

A moment of weakness is real, but a pattern of compromise is what happens when I stop disciplining my life around the new man in me. Old patterns don’t disappear just because I believe. They have grooves. They were trained into me for years. And if I don’t replace them, I return to the path of least resistance: forgetfulness. James warns about that exact problem: hearing, then walking away, then forgetting (James 1:22–25). Jesus says the same thing: the house stands when I hear His words and do them, and it falls when I hear and don’t do them (Matt 7:24–27). That’s why my commitment stays firm only when my daily life has continuance, not intensity for a week, but steady obedience over time (Josh 1:8; Ps 1:1–3). 

 

Abiding Is The Center Of Staying Firm 

For me, the most practical truth in this whole discussion is Jesus’ command: “Abide in Me” (John 15:4–7). Abiding is not mystical. It’s daily connection. 

  • Staying in His Word (John 8:31–32; Ps 119:11) 
  • Staying in prayer (Acts 2:42) 
  • Staying in fellowship (Heb 10:23–25) 
  • Staying honest when I’m tempted to drift into self-deception (James 1:22–25) 

Jesus says it plainly: without Him I can do nothing (John 15:4–7). So if I want a firm commitment, I stop pretending I can run on empty and still stand strong. 

 

Fighting The Real Battle 

If I forget the battle, I lose the war. Scripture doesn’t say I’m wrestling mainly with my schedule, my moods, or my circumstances. It says there’s a spiritual battle, and I must put on the whole armor of God so I can stand (Eph 6:10–18). And it says I must be sober and vigilant because the enemy wants to devour me so I resist him steadfast in the faith (1 Pet 5:8–9). A firm commitment is not built by good intentions. It’s built by alertness, resistance, endurance, and daily dependence. 

 

What I Do When I Fail 

This is where I want to be very clear. I do not keep my commitment firm by pretending I never fall. I keep it firm by refusing to quit. Paul said it: “Not that I have already attained… but I press on” (Phil 3:12–14). That’s my life. I press on. I get up. I keep moving. And when I’m tempted to sit in discouragement, I remember Hebrews: I lay aside every weight and the sin that ensnares, and I run with endurance looking unto Jesus, the author and finisher of our faith (Heb 12:1–3). That is where my confidence belongs. Not in my perfection, but in His faithfulness (Heb 10:23; Phil 1:6). 

 

What “Small Obedience” Looks Like Right Now 

Sometimes the most spiritual thing I can do is the next faithful step. 

·      Continue in the things I’ve learned (2 Tim 3:14–17) 

·      Keep building up my faith through prayer (Jude 20–21) 

·      Keep myself in the love of God (Jude 20–21) 

·      Keep doing the work the Lord has put in front of me, knowing it is not in vain (1 Cor 15:58) 

·      Stay connected to believers, because isolation is where drift grows (Heb 10:23–25) 

·      And I keep asking God to renew my mind so I don’t get conformed to the world again (Rom 12:1–2). 

 

The sentence I want you to walk away with is this: No matter how hard we fall, no matter how muddy we get, the one thing we must do is get up, brush ourselves off, look to Christ, and keep moving forward. Don’t quit. 

 

Check out my Book for further encouragement. 

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

 

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Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Forgiveness After Deep Hurt: Freedom Without Denial

When someone has been deeply hurt, I’ve learned that I can’t begin by demanding forgiveness from them, or by quoting verses at them like band-aids. I have to start by acknowledging what their heart already knows: the pain was real, the injustice was real, and what happened mattered. Forgiveness is not God telling us, “Pretend it didn’t happen.” Forgiveness is God showing us a way to stop being owned by what happened. That’s why, when I explain forgiveness, I need to begin with what it is not. Forgiveness is not excusing evil. It is not calling evil “good.” It is not saying, “You didn’t hurt me.” It is not forgetting. It is not automatically restoring access to someone who proved they were unsafe. Scripture never commands me to be naïve. It does command me to be free. And that leads to what forgiveness actually is. 

 

Forgiveness is releasing the debt, releasing my right to personally collect payment. It is handing the case to the only Judge who can judge righteously. That’s why Romans tells me plainly, “Do not avenge yourselves… for it is written, ‘Vengeance is Mine, I will repay,’ says the Lord” (Rom 12:19). When I forgive, I’m not declaring the offender innocent. I’m declaring that God is Judge, and I am not. I’m choosing to stop replaying the offense as if my bitterness will fix it. This is where many people get stuckthey want the offender to admit what they did. They want the harm acknowledged. And that desire is understandable. But if my ability to forgive depends on the other person having a repentant heart, then I have placed my freedom in their hands. Jesus doesn’t put our freedom in the offender’s hands. He puts it in God the Father’s hands.

 

That’s why Jesus’ teaching in Matthew 18 cuts so deep. Peter asked the question we all ask in our own way: “How often shall I forgive?” Jesus answered, “Up to seventy times seven” (Matt 18:21–22). Then He told the parable of the servant who was forgiven a crushing debt, but refused to forgive a smaller debt (Matt 18:23–35). The point is not that the second debt didn’t matter. The point is that the unforgiving servant was living as if he had never been forgiven at all. And I’ll say it the way I would say it to myselfunforgiveness is a prison. When I refuse to forgive, I’m still tied to the person and the moment that hurt me. I can cut them off, move away, act tough, and still be chained inside. That’s why Hebrews warns about “any root of bitterness springing up” that causes trouble and defiles many (Heb 12:15). Bitterness does not stay contained. It spreads. It reshapes how we see life, people, God, and even ourselves. 

 

So I tell the deeply hurt person the truthforgiveness is not first about the offender’s comfort; it is about our freedom. It is about refusing to let that hurt become the center of our identity. Love “thinks no evil” (1 Cor 13:5), not meaning love becomes blind, but meaning love refuses to keep a running record, refuses to live on the constant replay. Proverbs puts it plainly: “He who covers a transgression seeks love, but he who repeats a matter separates friends” (Prov 17:9). Sometimes we repeat it because we’re trying to make the other person feel what we felt. But it doesn’t heal us. It just keeps the wound open. 

 

Now, this is where I slow down and get a bit more biblical or pastoralforgiveness is often a process.Jesus’ “seventy times seven” is not a math problem; it’s a way of saying you may have to forgive again and again as the memory and the emotion resurface. That doesn’t mean you failed. That means you’re human. That means you’re healing. Some days you forgive with clarity, and some days you forgive with tears. And that’s why the gospel matters here, not as a weapon, but as the foundation. 

 

Scripture keeps bringing me back to this: we forgive because we have been forgiven. “Forgiving one another, even as God in Christ forgave you” (Eph 4:32). “As Christ forgave you, so you also must do” (Col 3:13). God did not merely overlook our sins. He dealt with them. He covered them with mercy. He removed them “as far as the east is from the west” (Ps 103:12). He invites us, “Though your sins are like scarlet, they shall be as white as snow” (Isa 1:18). And He promises cleansing when we confess: “He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins” (1 John 1:9). Even Micah says it in a way that should amaze us all: God “delights in mercy” and “will cast all our sins into the depths of the sea” (Micah 7:18–19). That is not a small forgiveness. 

 

So when I talk about forgiving others, I’m not talking about pretending their sin didn’t matter. I’m talking about learning to live like someone who has received mercy I did not deserve. Romans says it plainly: “All have sinned and fall short… being justified freely by His grace” (Rom 3:23–24). If God has dealt with me like that, then forgiveness is not optional in my walk; it is part of who I am becoming in Christ. But here is the honesty I won’t dodgeforgiveness does not mean reconciliation is automatic. Jesus Himself said, “If your brother sins against you, rebuke him; and if he repents, forgive him” (Luke 17:3–4). Repentance matters. Trust is rebuilt over time. And if the situation involved abuse, cruelty, or ongoing danger, then forgiveness must be paired with wisdom and safety. Romans says, “If it is possible, as much as depends on you, live peaceably with all men” (Rom 12:18). That verse quietly admits something: sometimes it is not possible. Sometimes peace requires boundaries. 

 

Even Jesus on the cross forgave, saying, “Father, forgive them” (Luke 23:34), but that did not mean He called evil “good.” It meant He refused to be mastered by hatred. Stephen echoed that same spirit: “Lord, do not charge them with this sin” (Acts 7:60). That kind of forgiveness is supernatural. It does not come from denial. It comes from belonging to God. That’s where our comfort comes inwe don’t have to carry the case anymore. We don’t have to stay trapped in the courtroom of our own mind. God is Judge. God is not confused. God is not manipulated. God is not blind. And if we release the offender into God’s hands, we are not saying, “It didn’t matter.” We are saying, “It mattered enough to hand it to the One who judges perfectly.” 

 

Joseph lived that out when he faced the very people who meant to destroy him. He didn’t deny the evil. He named it: “You meant evil against me.” But he also named the larger reality: “God meant it for good” (Gen 50:20). Then he chose a posture of mercy and provision: “Do not be afraid… I will provide” (Gen 50:19–21). That is what forgiveness looks like when God has healed the soul: the wound is not forgotten, but it is no longer in control. 

 

So when someone asks me how to explain forgiveness to the deeply hurt, I say it like this: Forgiveness is not saying you were not harmed. Forgiveness is saying you will not live in bondage to the harm. It is giving up personal revenge. It is releasing the debt into God’s hands. It is refusing to let bitterness become your identity. It is choosing love that “is not provoked” and “thinks no evil” (1 Cor 13:4–5), not because evil didn’t happen, but because Christ is teaching us how to live free. And if the person tells me, “I’m not ready,” I don’t shame them. I tell them the truth: bitterness is heavy, and it will not carry you safely. It will only consume you. 

 

Forgiveness may start as a prayer that feels impossible, but it can grow into a choice, and that choice can become a new way of living. And even when the apology never comes, God can still make you whole. This is the sentence I want them to walk away with: We may never receive the apology. But we can still be free because God is the One who heals us, and forgiveness is one of the ways He refuses to let our wound become our prison. 

Is it Rational to Believe in God?