Where God Has Forgotten

There have been moments in my life where I have truly missed it… not just lightly, but in ways that came from deep places of pain, frustration, and woundedness. In those moments, I have spoken in ways that did not honor those God placed above me. When the weight of it settled in, I knew. I needed to humble myself.

So I did.

I went back. I repented to them, and I repented before the Lord. But truthfully, walking out repentance is not always simple. Sometimes it lingers. Sometimes it feels like the moment keeps echoing long after you’ve laid it down. You feel watched, waiting for the next slip up. If possible, enemy will even take every chance to poke and prod you into more places of pain to make that walk all the more difficult. He delights in your failure and whispers how much of a disappointment you are when it happens.

Over the past few days, I have spent time in prayer and fasting, bringing this before the Lord again and again. Not because I wanted to stay in shame, but because I genuinely desired to be right in His sight. I wanted to change. Yet there was this quiet struggle in my heart… a feeling that I hadn’t truly been forgiven. I had to prove myself.

Then today, in the middle of what felt like endless driving, the Lord met me in such a gentle way.

Right as I was arriving home, I felt His Spirit whisper to my heart: “Audience of One.”

It settled everything.

He reminded me that while I am called to humble myself before others and seek reconciliation, I cannot control whether someone chooses to forgive me. That part belongs to them. What matters is that I humbled myself, that I obeyed, that I came low before Him.

In that place, His forgiveness is not partial. It is not hesitant. It is complete.

I was taken back to the early days of my salvation, when the weight of my past felt overwhelming. I remember feeling like I needed to account for every single sin, as if I had to earn my way back into right standing. The enemy pressed hard with that lie.

But the Holy Spirit spoke something so freeing.. that my sins were cast away, removed, no longer held against me.

“As far as the east is from the west, so far has He removed our transgressions from us.” — Psalm 103:12

“You will cast all our sins into the depths of the sea.” — Micah 7:19

That is the kindness of God. That is the freedom found in His mercy and grace.

Repentance is not meant to trap us in a cycle of condemnation. It is meant to bring us back into alignment with Him. Once we have truly repented, we are invited to walk forward in humility… not constantly looking backward in shame.

There may be times when others remember what God has already forgiven. There may be moments when it is brought up again, or held against us. But I am learning that I cannot live bound to what God has already released me from. If He says I am forgiven, then that’s it. It is done.

The enemy accuses. He revisits. He replays. He wants you to never live it down. He delights in seeing you broken and hurting. He will drag it out for years if possible keeping you trapped in chains of shame and condemnation.

But God forgives and restores. That’s is why we have joy. It is because HE has forgiven us. The enemy wants you to forget that.

I choose to stay low before Him, to keep my heart soft, to remain teachable… and to trust that He alone sees the full posture of my heart.

“If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.” — 1 John 1:9

Only God truly sees the heart. His mercy is deeper than my failure.

Father, I come before You with a humble heart. Thank You for Your mercy that meets me even in my weakness. Thank You that when I repent, You are faithful to forgive and to cleanse. Teach me to walk in true humility, not in shame, but in surrender. Help me to release the need for man’s approval and rest fully in Your grace. Guard my heart from condemnation, and anchor me in the truth of Your love. Let my life reflect a heart that is continually yielded to You. In Jesus’ name, amen.

Sea of Forgetfulness

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Vindicated by the God Who Sees

There are moments in life when staying aligned with God does not look strong or impressive. It looks quiet. It looks misunderstood. It looks like holding your ground when someone in authority gets it wrong.

I think about Hannah.

She was not performing. She was not trying to draw attention. She was pouring out her heart before the Lord in deep anguish. Scripture tells us in 1 Samuel 1:12–13 that as she continued praying, Eli observed her mouth. Her lips were moving, but her voice was not heard. To him, it looked wrong.

He misread her completely.

In 1 Samuel 1:14, he confronted her: “How long will you go on being drunk?” Imagine that moment. Already broken. Already vulnerable. And now accused.

She could have shut down.
She could have become offended.
She could have walked away from the temple entirely.

But she didn’t.

In 1 Samuel 1:15–16, she answered with humility and truth: “No, my lord, I am a woman troubled in spirit… I have been pouring out my soul before the LORD.”

That response ministers to me deeply.

She honored authority without accepting a false label. She clarified without dishonor. She stayed aligned without becoming defensive. Her posture did not change just because she was misunderstood.

There have been seasons in my own life where I felt misread. Moments where my silence was interpreted as something else. Times when my heart posture was not accurately seen. And I have had to ask myself: Will I stay steady? Will I remain aligned even if affirmation does not come?

Because alignment with God does not mean being affirmed by everyone.

Sometimes alignment means being faithful when you are misjudged. It means allowing God to defend what others misunderstand. It means trusting that He sees the difference between rebellion and brokenness, between pride and pain.

Psalm 139:1–2 reminds me, “O LORD, you have searched me and known me… You discern my thoughts from afar.” He knows. Fully. Completely.

Proverbs 15:3 says, “The eyes of the LORD are in every place.” Nothing escapes Him. Not the injustice. Not the misunderstanding. Not the tears prayed silently.

And what moves me most is what happens next.

In 1 Samuel 1:17, Eli responds, “Go in peace, and the God of Israel grant your petition.” The very authority that misjudged her becomes the voice of blessing over her.

God turned misjudgment into peace.

Jeremiah 17:10 says, “I the LORD search the heart and test the mind.” Vindication does not come from being properly understood by people. It comes from being known by God.

Hannah stayed aligned. And God answered her prayer in His time.

That challenges me.

When I am misunderstood, will I remain honest, humble, and anchored? Will I let God be the One who corrects what others misread?

Sometimes staying aligned means staying steady when authority gets it wrong.

And sometimes the greatest strength is not proving yourself, but trusting the God who already knows your heart.

Aligned, Even When Misunderstood