If you watch the news or scroll social media at all, you’ve seen a lot lately. There’s so much happening—pain, evil, injustice, tragedy—and maybe it’s left you wondering:
How can God be good when the world feels this broken?
Why do bad things happen?
Why does God heal some people but not others?
Why does He feel silent when I need Him most?
Am I even really saved? Are You even listening, God?
Those questions can feel heavy. They can make you feel like something is wrong with your faith.
But here’s the truth: having doubts doesn’t mean you’ve lost your faith.
Doubt can actually be the doorway to deeper trust—if you bring those questions to God.
There is a difference between doubt and unbelief.
Unbelief is turning your back on God.
Doubt is when you want to trust Him but can’t make sense of what you see.
Doubt shows up when you face tragedy, unanswered prayers, or scary circumstances and whisper, “God, are You really there?”
Faith isn’t having everything tied up neatly with a bow.
Faith is choosing to trust God one step at a time—even when life doesn’t make sense.
Satan wants to keep us stuck, distracted, and paralyzed by our doubts so we never live out the life God has for us.
This is one of the hardest questions of all.
Jesus was honest about it. In John 16:33 He said:
“In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world.”
He didn’t deny pain. He acknowledged it—and then promised He is bigger than all of it.
So… why does suffering happen?
God didn’t create us because He was lonely or incomplete. He has always existed in perfect love—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Creation was an overflow of that love, not a solution to a deficiency.
And love cannot exist without choice.
So God gave humanity free will.
He didn’t create robots; He created children with the ability to choose Him or reject Him.
Free will makes real love possible.
But it also means real pain is possible.
When Adam and Eve chose disobedience in Genesis 3, sin entered the world—and with it came death, sickness, evil, and brokenness.
So when we see suffering, it’s not because God isn’t good.
It’s because sin has twisted what God made good.
And yet—even knowing humanity would fall—God still created us.
Before creation, He already had a plan of redemption.
He knew the cost and chose to create us anyway.
That’s not careless.
That’s love.
Romans 8:28 reminds us that God works all things together for good. That doesn’t mean everything is good—tragedy and injustice are not good.
But God has the power to redeem what the enemy meant for harm.
James 1:13 is clear:
“God cannot be tempted by evil, nor does He tempt anyone.”
God may permit trials, but He is never the source of evil.
What about Job?
Job’s suffering came from the enemy—not God.
God set limits, but Satan caused the pain.
God’s purpose was to refine Job’s faith, not destroy it.
And even in that story, God restored Job beyond what he lost.
What about when prayers aren’t answered?
When we begged for healing and the funeral still happened?
When someone else’s miracle arrives and ours never does?
These are deep, painful questions.
Isaiah 55:9 reminds us:
“My ways are higher than your ways, and my thoughts than your thoughts.”
We won’t always see the reason on this side of heaven.
But we can trust the heart of God.
He is with us in the hospital room.
With us in the waiting.
With us in the grief.
And one day Revelation 21:4 will become reality:
“He will wipe every tear… there will be no more death or mourning or crying or pain.”
Brokenness is not the end of the story.
Here are some of the most common doubts—and what to do with them.
You prayed like never before. You rallied others. You believed.
And still—the healing didn’t come.
That kind of loss shakes your faith.
What to do:
Be honest with God. Bring Him your anger, questions, and grief.
Your raw prayers do not scare Him.
Remember: unanswered doesn’t mean unheard.
Sometimes God’s plan involves ultimate healing in heaven instead of temporary healing here.
Ask Him to comfort you and stay close to your broken heart.
Psalm 34:18 reminds us He does.
You’ve prayed for clarity about your future, family, or next step… and all you hear is silence.
What to do:
Turn the silence into a prayer:
“Lord, what do You want me to do in this season of waiting?”
Waiting isn’t wasted.
It’s often where God grows your roots deeper.
Ask Him to shape your heart while you wait.
You wake up heavy. You can’t shake the thoughts. You wonder:
If I trusted God more, wouldn’t I feel different?
What to do:
Feelings don’t prove or disprove faith.
David cried out, “Why are you downcast, O my soul?”
He wasn’t disqualified.
Bring your struggle to God:
“Lord, this is heavy. I need You to carry me today.”
And take one practical step—call a friend, go for a walk, journal, or seek professional help when needed.
Faith isn’t the absence of struggle.
It’s where you take the struggle.
Your doubt doesn’t disqualify you. And Scripture proves it.
God promised Abraham a son. Decades passed. Still nothing.
So Sarah tried to “help” God by giving Hagar to Abraham.
Trying to take control ourselves always leads to pain.
But even in their doubt and detours, God stayed faithful.
He fulfilled His promise in His perfect timing.
God doesn’t require flawless faith to keep His promises.
Moses argued with God:
“Who am I that I should go?”
He doubted his ability. He doubted God’s choice.
Even with miracles in front of him, he kept looking at his insecurities.
He finally said, “Please send someone else.”
And yet—God didn’t replace him.
He worked with Moses’ weakness, gave him Aaron for support, and still used Moses powerfully.
It’s not about our ability.
It’s about God’s presence.
Thomas gets a bad reputation. He simply wanted evidence.
A week later, Jesus showed up and met him right where he was.
He didn’t shame Thomas. He revealed Himself.
Thomas’ doubt led to deeper faith.
Peter literally walked on water—but took his eyes off Jesus and sank.
Jesus asked, “Why did you doubt?”
And yet, He still gave Peter and the others the Great Commission.
Doubt has never disqualified anyone from God’s calling.
1. Take it straight to God.
Raw prayer is still prayer.
Tell Him everything.
2. Search Scripture for truth.
Look up verses related to your question.
Use tools and trusted websites like GotQuestions.org.
3. Look for the good right where you are.
Keep a gratitude journal.
Write how God has shown up for you before.
4. Make space to listen.
Take a walk.
Sit in silence with worship music.
Let God speak.
5. Talk it out with someone safe.
A friend, mentor, pastor, or small group.
Bring your doubts into the light.
Friend, if you’re in a season of doubt, take comfort:
Abraham doubted.
Moses doubted.
Thomas doubted.
The disciples doubted.
And God still loved them, used them, and fulfilled His promises.
Your doubt doesn’t scare Him.
It doesn’t push Him away.
It might actually be the place where your faith grows the deepest.
Proverbs 3:5–6
“Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways submit to him, and he will make your paths straight.”
This verse reminds us that trust means shifting the weight off our limited view and onto God’s wisdom.
This week, when doubt rises, pause and pray:
“Lord, I choose to trust You more than what I can see or explain.”
Release one thing you’ve been clinging to.
One unanswered prayer.
One fear about the future.
One situation you can’t control.
Trust grows one surrendered choice at a time.
Because that is where we find peace.