Showing posts with label church. Show all posts
Showing posts with label church. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Faith Before Words: Growing Up in the Same Church That Still Holds Us Today

 

Faith Before Words

“For by grace you have been saved through faith—and this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God.”
— Ephesians 2:8

My first memory of faith is not of God.





It is not scripture or sermons or prayers spoken aloud. It is not belief, as adults understand belief. My first memory is of people, the church, and being there.

I remember the nursery.

I don’t remember lessons or songs, but I remember the adults who took care of us. The way they lifted us, watched us, tended to small needs with quiet consistency. At the time, I didn’t have language for what that meant. I only knew that for a little while, someone was paying attention. Someone was responsible for me. Someone noticed if I cried.

Looking back now, I see grace there—before I knew its name. Not dramatic or announced. Just steady care, freely given, without asking anything from me in return.

Most of those people are gone now. Some have died. Others left the church long ago. But they remain in my memory not because of what they taught, but because of how they showed up. Their care was ordinary and temporary—and yet it mattered more than theology ever could have at that age.

I also remember the pews.

I remember lying across them, small enough that the wood felt wide beneath my body. I would look up at the lights and the ceiling, tracing patterns I couldn’t name. I listened to the choir sing. I didn’t understand the words, but I felt the sound fill the room and move through me. It settled somewhere deep and unformed.






Church, in those early years, was not something I understood.
It was something I experienced.

Light.
Sound.
Stillness.
Being watched over.

My faith began before I had words for God. Before I knew what belief required or demanded. It began in fragments of safety—in moments where the world softened just enough for me to breathe. Grace arrived first, long before belief knew how to follow.

But even then, church was complicated.

Attending church with my mother—and sometimes my father—was confusing in ways I did not yet know how to name. I saw a version of my mother there that did not exist at home. I watched her speak kindly to others, laugh easily, offer care and concern. People trusted her. They saw her as gentle and warm.

And I sat beside her, holding two truths that did not fit together.

The mother others saw did not match the one I knew. I did not understand how both could exist in the same person. I didn’t have language for masks or image or charm. I only knew that something felt deeply wrong—and that no one else seemed to notice.

Church was one of the first places I learned that appearances could lie.
That people could be one thing in public and another in private.
That harm could hide behind kindness.

Grace did not erase that confusion. It did not rush to explain it away. Instead, it stayed with the child who sensed something was wrong and quietly trusted her awareness, even when no one affirmed it yet.

Around the age of eight or nine, something shifted.

I was old enough to listen—to the readings for that Sunday and the sermon that followed—and to begin wondering whether God might be more than atmosphere. I remember sitting there and thinking, Maybe God will help me. Because I believe in Him.

That thought landed with weight.

It wasn’t theological. It was desperate. I didn’t yet have words for what was wrong in my life, but I knew I needed help. And if believing in God meant help was possible, then I would believe with everything I had.

So I started praying.

Every day.
Sometimes two or three times a day.

They weren’t polished prayers. They were repetitive, earnest, almost bargaining in their hope. I prayed because I believed belief itself mattered—that if I did this correctly, if I was faithful enough, God might intervene. Might soften something. Might fix what I could not explain.

Prayer became my private lifeline. Something I could do that felt active instead of helpless. I prayed before school. I prayed at night. I prayed quietly in my head when the day felt too heavy.

I didn’t pray for miracles.
I prayed for relief.
For safety.
For things to change.

Only later did I realize that grace was already answering those prayers—not by fixing everything, but by keeping me alive, by giving me a place to turn, by holding me through what I could not yet escape.

For a long time, church and faith were the same thing in my mind.

As a child—and well into my early twenties—I did not know how to separate them. Church was where faith lived. Faith was filtered through people, systems, sermons, and expectations. What happened inside those walls shaped what I believed God was like.

So when church disappointed me, faith felt like the disappointment too.

When I felt unseen or misunderstood, it wasn’t just people who failed me—it felt like God had. When silence was expected, I assumed heaven echoed that silence. When obedience was praised over honesty, I learned to distrust my own voice not just with others, but with God.

Resentment crept in slowly.

I resented the way faith seemed tied to places where truth felt unsafe. I resented how easily people spoke of grace while I was still trying to survive. I resented how belief was presented as simple when my life was anything but.

And because I could not yet separate church from God, I resented them both.

For a long time, I misunderstood grace.

I thought grace was conditional—something given after repentance, after forgiveness, after I had proven myself worthy. I thought it was fragile. Something I could lose if I was angry, questioning, or broken for too long.

But grace was never asking me to earn it.

Grace is not deserved.
Grace is not negotiated.
Grace is not withdrawn when faith is messy.

Grace is God’s unmerited favor—moving first, staying longest, holding even when belief is confused. It does not belong to buildings or people or performance. It belongs to God alone.

Learning this did not erase the past—but it loosened its grip.

It meant God was not aligned with harm, even when harm happened in holy spaces. It meant my childhood prayers were not evaluated for correctness. It meant my resentment did not disqualify me, and my questions did not exile me.

Grace had been present all along—quiet, patient, waiting until I could recognize it for what it was.

And still—I remain.

I still attend the same church I did when I was a young child. The church where my parents were married. The church where I was baptized. The same building where I lay across the pews and stared at the lights.

It is also the church where I was married.
Where my children were baptized.
Where they are now growing up—walking the same aisles, sitting in the same pews, learning faith in the same space where mine began, fractured, and slowly re-formed.




This is not because the church has been perfect.
It has not.
Neither have the people within it.

But grace does not require perfection to remain.

This place has seen my whole story.

It has seen me as a child searching for safety.
As a teenager clinging to belief.
As a young adult resentful and tired.
As a woman learning to untangle God from harm.
As a mother bringing her children forward, trusting grace to meet them more gently than it met me.

My faith has grown here—not in a straight line, but in cycles. It has questioned here. Broken here. Rebuilt here. Grace did not rush any of it.

There is something sacred in that continuity.

Not because the building itself is holy—but because grace has been willing to meet me here again and again. The same walls that once held my earliest prayers now echo with my children’s voices. The same font that marked my beginning has marked theirs.

My faith did not outgrow this place.
It learned how to live more truthfully within it.

Reflection
Grace found me before I could name it, stayed when I resented it, and remained when I learned to trust it again. I promise to let my faith keep growing without forcing it into certainty—and to trust that grace is wide enough to hold my whole story, and my children’s too.

Sunday, November 2, 2025

All Saints and Sinners

All Saints and Sinners

I lift up my eyes to the hills—
where does my help come from?
My help comes from the Lord,
the Maker of heaven and earth.

He will not let your foot slip—
he who watches over you will not slumber;
indeed, he who watches over Israel
will neither slumber nor sleep.

The Lord watches over you—
the Lord is your shade at your right hand;
the sun will not harm you by day,
nor the moon by night.

The Lord will keep you from all harm—
he will watch over your life;
the Lord will watch over your coming and going
both now and forevermore.
Psalm 121


There are nights I still wonder what heaven will feel like, not the clouds and the light, but the faces. The ones I long to see, and the ones I’m not sure I’m ready for.

We celebrated All Saints’ Sunday at church, and as I walked through the sanctuary and saw the line of photos, faces of those who now rest in the columbarium, my stomach turned. Each picture was meant to bring comfort, a reminder of eternal life and hope. But I found myself staring and wondering, will they be there too?

If heaven is perfect, what happens to the pain they caused?
If grace really means grace, does that mean they’re there too?

This thought has unsettled me off and on for years. As I get older, I feel that I’m slowly getting closer to finding out the answer. I wanted heaven to be a place of safety, of peace, not a reunion with the people who broke me. I wanted the light to fall only on the faces that brought warmth, not on the ones that taught me fear.

But grace doesn’t ask for my permission.
It doesn’t stay inside the lines I draw to keep my heart safe.

And sometimes, in the quiet, another question rises — one that frightens me more than the rest:
What happens to me if I can’t forgive them?

It’s not something I ever want to do. Forgiveness feels impossible, almost like betrayal, as if forgiving them would mean saying it was somehow okay when it never was. But then I wonder, what does that mean for my salvation? What does it mean for my seat beside Jesus if my heart still trembles at the thought of mercy for them?

I’ve been told that forgiveness is required of me, that if I want to be forgiven, I must forgive.
But no one has ever talked about the fact that maybe God knows the difference between refusing to forgive and not being ready yet.

I am not sure where I am on that spectrum, but I have to believe He sees the struggle, the way I keep coming back to Him with the same ache, the same confusion, the same prayer that always begins with, “Lord, I don’t know how.”

And maybe forgiveness, in His eyes, isn’t a single moment or a sentence spoken out loud. Maybe it’s the long, trembling willingness to let Him keep softening what’s still too hard.

There are days I fear that my inability to forgive makes me unworthy of heaven, an unworthy child of God. My anger feels like it disqualifies me from grace, from forgiveness, from belonging. I still carry this quiet dread that when the gates open, I might find myself standing outside, still tangled in the pain I could never release.

But then I try to remember: grace was never something I could earn. It was given before I even knew how to ask for it. Still, the doubts linger, not in my mind so much as in my soul. I still question my ability to reach heaven, to be welcomed into that perfect love when so much of me still aches with what was never made right.

Yet even in those moments of doubt, I think God holds me closer, not farther away. Maybe He knows that faith isn’t always confident; sometimes it’s trembling and unsure, whispered through tears. Maybe He sees that I’m still trying, still coming back, still letting Him find me in the middle of the struggle.

Sometimes I imagine walking into that light and seeing their faces, not the versions that hurt me, but the ones God meant them to be before everything went wrong. I wonder if they’ll recognize me, or if I’ll even need words to understand. Maybe forgiveness will finally make sense in that moment — not as something I had to work toward, but as something that simply is.

Heaven, I think, will be the first place where forgiveness feels easy — not because the wounds didn’t matter, but because they’ve been healed by something stronger than pain. Because the only scars in heaven are on Jesus, not me.

Here on earth, forgiveness still feels like holding fire. It burns even when I mean it. But in heaven, I think the flames will finally go out.

Maybe that’s what perfect peace really is, not pretending it didn’t happen, but knowing that somehow, God made it right.

Maybe heaven isn’t about having perfectly forgiven everyone, but about finally being free from the need to keep trying. Maybe God will finish the forgiveness in me that I couldn’t finish myself.

And when that day comes, when all that’s left is light and love, maybe I’ll finally understand what it means that mercy triumphs over judgment, even mine.


Reflection

Forgiveness isn’t a door I open once. It’s a road I keep walking, slow, uneven, sacred.
And maybe heaven is where that road finally ends, where the burden of trying is lifted, and all that’s left is love.


Prayer

Lord, You know how deep the wounds go,
and how hard it is to let go of what was never made right.
You see the struggle inside me — the ache, the fear, the longing to believe You’ll make it new.

Teach me to trust Your mercy more than my pain.
Hold me when forgiveness feels too heavy to carry.

If they are in Your kingdom, let me be glad they made it home.
And if I see them there, let me see them through Your eyes —
redeemed, restored, forgiven.

Heal what they broke in me, and finish what I could not.
So that when I reach heaven’s shore,
there will be no more fear in my remembering —
only grace.

Amen. 

Saturday, October 25, 2025

When Healing and Faith Collide

 

Both of my parents died a year apart — my dad on May 2, 2014, one day after his sixty-fifth birthday, and my mom on May 12, 2015, just after turning sixty-six. I sometimes think of those dates not just as the days they left this world, but as the days my world shifted forever.

When my mother took her final breath, I sat there watching — a rush of conflicting emotions flooding through me. Fear. Relief. Sorrow. Longing. It felt like the air in the room changed shape, like something heavy had finally been lifted, and yet something sacred had been lost at the same time.

Her death was a strange turning point. For so long I had carried fear — fear that she would hurt me again, fear that I would never be free of her shadow, fear that my body would always flinch at the sound of her voice. And then, suddenly, that fear was gone. I slept better. I could breathe again. My dreams quieted; my nights weren’t battles anymore.

I went almost ten years without nightmares, without having to push away the ghosts of my past. But this year, for reasons I can’t quite name, the darkness stirred again. Some say it’s because of a student whose story mirrors mine. Others call it part of healing — old wounds surfacing so they can finally close. Maybe it’s both.

Maybe it’s my student. Maybe it’s that my own children are reaching the ages when I first learned to be afraid. Maybe it’s realizing that I still long for something I will never have — a mother. A safe relationship. The kind of love I am trying so hard to give to my children, without having had an example to follow.

Whatever the reason, it’s like the past has knocked again — gently this time, but insistently. The fear is softer, but the ache is deeper. I see now that even when the nightmares fade, the story isn’t over. Healing keeps unfolding, layer by layer, often in the middle of ordinary life.

And in those moments, my faith is the only thing that holds steady — reminding me that grace does not depend on how healed I feel, but on the One who promises to make all things new, even the memories that still sting.

But what’s hardest this time is that I find myself questioning everything I once felt sure of — my faith, my understanding of who God is, what He wants, and even what the church on earth is meant to be.

For so long, the rope of grace held me — thin at times, but unbreakable. It pulled me through sleepless nights and silent prayers, through the fear that my past would swallow me whole. But lately, that rope feels like it’s unraveling. Each question I ask seems to loosen another thread.

And I don’t know what it will mean if I try to repair it. Will it still hold me the same way? Will I recognize the God I meet on the other side of doubt? Or will He be someone new — someone I have to learn to trust all over again?

People have asked me over the years, “How can you believe there is a God?” I never really understood that question until recently.

Of all the places I thought I would feel unwelcome, I never imagined it would be the church. For most of my life, church was where I clung to hope — where hymns steadied my breath and communion reminded me that I belonged to something bigger, something merciful. But now, I can’t even bring myself to walk through the doors.

I know in my mind that the pastor doesn’t make the church. But what do you do when the council and the congregation go along with whatever he says simply because he is the pastor? When leadership mistakes authority for truth, and silence for faithfulness?

It’s a strange kind of heartbreak — to lose your safe place inside the house of God. To feel the warmth of community fade into something colder. I sit with my Bible sometimes and wonder: Is God disappointed in me for stepping back? Or is He sitting beside me, whispering, “Rest for a while, My child”?

Because the God I once knew — the One who sat with me in the dark, who saw the scars and still called me beloved — He doesn’t seem to live in that building anymore. And maybe that’s the point. Maybe He’s been outside the whole time, waiting for me to stop confusing the structure with His Spirit.

I don’t know how people with mental health struggles or trauma don’t have faith issues, too. How could they not? When your story is filled with betrayal, abandonment, or pain, it seeps into how you see God — whether you mean for it to or not.

For me, the wounds of the past didn’t just damage my sense of safety; they damaged my ability to believe that love could stay. And if love couldn’t stay, how could God?

Over the years, I’ve seen what people — and whole congregations — do to those who struggle deeply with mental health. And most of it is negative. They say they’ll pray for you, but they also step back. They whisper, diagnose, or quietly decide you’re “too much.” They think a professional needs to deal with it, as if the presence of pain makes a person unfit for the community.

But faith isn’t supposed to be sanitized. The church was never meant to be a waiting room for the already healed. It’s supposed to be a refuge for the broken. And yet, so often, those who are hurting most are pushed toward the margins — the very people Jesus always drew close.

People talk about faith and therapy like they’re two different roads — one for the soul, one for the mind. But I don’t think they can be separated. When trauma fractures you, it doesn’t ask which part it’s allowed to break. Healing has to touch all of it — the brain that replays the memories, the heart that still flinches, and the spirit that keeps asking why.

I think repairing faith and repairing mental health are part of the same process — the slow work of learning to trust again. Trusting your thoughts. Trusting love. Trusting that maybe, just maybe, God was not the one who hurt you, but the One who wept with you when it happened.

But even knowing that, I struggle with both my faith and my mental health alone — and quietly.

It’s not that I don’t want to talk about it. It’s that most people don’t know what to do with that kind of honesty. The church doesn’t always have space for complicated believers — the ones who still show up but sit in the back, unsure if they belong. And the world doesn’t always understand how faith can still matter after everything. So I stay somewhere in between, whispering prayers I’m not sure I believe, asking for peace from a God I’m still learning to trust.

Some days, that feels like failure. Other days, it feels like faith in its truest form — not polished or certain, but persevering. Maybe that’s what grace really looks like: not the absence of struggle, but the courage to keep holding both doubt and hope in the same trembling hands.

I’m still questioning what to do — whether to stay in this church that feels so empty or to look for another one, a place where I can breathe again. I wonder if anyone would even notice if I left. That thought alone hurts more than I want to admit.

This struggle has brought me back to that old familiar place — a sense of loss and emptiness. The kind I thought I’d already healed from. It’s strange how the same emotions resurface, wearing different clothes. The loneliness of my childhood is now dressed up as spiritual displacement.

But maybe this, too, is part of the journey — the stripping away of what was comfortable so something truer can grow. Maybe God is not confined to the sanctuary I’m scared to enter. Maybe He’s in the quiet space of my questioning, sitting beside me as I wrestle with the emptiness, whispering, “You are not lost, even when you don’t know where you belong.”


A Prayer for When Faith Feels Fragile

Lord,
You who have seen every loss, every fear, every question that hides beneath my quiet—
hold me here, in this in-between.

When belief feels like sand slipping through my fingers,
Teach me to rest in the truth that You still hold me.
When Your church feels like a place I no longer fit,
remind me that Your presence cannot be contained by walls.

You know the parts of me that ache for answers
and the parts that only want peace.
Help me to stop pretending I’m okay,
and instead, let me be honest in Your light.

If my faith must be rebuilt,
let it be on the foundation of Your mercy,
not fear, not shame — but grace that does not give up on me.

Sit with me in the silence,
and let that be enough for now.
Amen.

Monday, December 19, 2016

Mostly Complaining

Totally negative post. This month has not been my favorite. I know most of it is stress and depression but I just can not seem to snap out of it as I had hoped. I feel like I am complain and negative all the time. So much stuff has come up this month that has left me feeling alone and confused.
First off I have had some health issues come up that I was completely unprepared for. It all started off with a stomach ache right after Thanksgiving and got a lot bigger than I ever thought possible. I feel as though my body is giving up on me just when I need to be on the top of everything most of all for my kids. Ever since my hysterectomy I have been dealing with one issue after the other. I have learned over the past 6 months that I have a very hard time talking about my health or even admitting there may be an issue. My therapist thinks that my body is trying to tell me something! I wish I knew what it was saying already.

Second right after all these health issues started I received an e-mail from my church stating the following:
Hi Sophie and Ken, 
Every year the council has the duty to review our membership roles and update them according to who has 
maintained their membership status according to our governing documents. Our bylaws state: 
C8.05.01 For purposes of membership roll maintenance, any member who during the
current calendar year and the two previous calendar years has made no contribution of record, nor has been recorded as communing or attending a worship service, shall be considered inactive. 
In our preparation for this year's review, we noted that one or more of these requirements was not met by you this year. This may not mean that your membership status is in jeopardy just yet. We wanted to be sure that you're aware of this and that we can help you fulfill your membership commitments if you wish to retain your voting member status. 
I have grown up in this church my whole family has gone to this church for almost 50 years and they sent me and e-mail. I am in church almost every Sunday and there during the week as well and no on thought it talk to me about this before sending an e-mail. First off it was a clerical error that should have been check on first and if someone had talked to me they would have found that out. I take my membership very seriously and also would never be a member of a church that requires "contribution of record". I should mention that I have never seen the church counsel enforce this  and was under the impression that it was either or not both! I have only ever seen people lose/remove membership for inactivity. I tried talking to Pastor and the council president about it and felt that I was not heard either time. I totally understand the business/money side of the whole thing I just feel that it should have been handled in person. I know it might seem stupid but I am really considering looking for a new church home and what sucks the most is it is Christmas and this hole thing is just to emotional for me to handle.

Lastly being a mom is all that I ever wanted but I am starting to think I am not going to be as good at it as I have hoped I would be. I am stuck at home Monday through Friday for Michael's ABA therapy from 8:00am until 12:30pm then Kaylee goes to school from 12:30pm to 3:30pm and Michael takes a nap from 1:00pm to about 3:00pm. So I never get out of the house anymore I never get to see other adults except on weekends. Ken is working all the time so I am alone with the kids all day every. Don't get me wrong we have fun and the kids are the best thing that ever happened to me but I need to be around other people. I feel like I don't know how to have a conversation anymore. I have nothing to talk about I have one clue about current events happening day to day. I feel detached from the world. This is not got for my depression or anxiety. I knew being a mom meant self-sacrifice but this so much harder than what I had ever imagined. I have been fighting and pushing for all this help for Michael and now we have it and I feel trapped. I keep trying to focus on the long term. In one year life will be 100% different from right now and that this will not go on forever. Now if I could just find a way to keep Michael healthy for 12 months. LOL

I am really trying to get into the Christmas spirit. Kaylee is so excited about everything. She loves all the decorations and all the lights every where. I love hearing her sing all the Christmas songs and asking so many question about the meaning of Christmas. Next year I am hoping that Michael will understand what is going on as well. Grandma has been a life saver! I would truly be lost without her. I don't know what I would do if I could not call her or go there with my crazy kids weekly and sit on her couch and cry about Michael's behavior or after a week of Michael not sleeping at night stay there during day sleep/nap while she watches the kids. I feel bad that she is the main person I rely on most of the time. She is 92 and handles it all so much better than I do.