When we walk through negative circumstances, our first instinct is often to ask, “What did I do wrong?” And if we can find something we did wrong, we quietly assume something even worse — “Maybe God is upset with me. Maybe I’ve let Him down one too many times.”
That lie has whispered in countless hearts. The enemy of your soul would love nothing more than for you to interpret hardship as rejection. He wants you to confuse consequence with abandonment. He wants you to believe that because you dug the hole, God won’t climb down into it with you.
But Scripture tells a different story. Romans 8:1 (NLT) — “So now there is no condemnation for those who belong to Christ Jesus.” It does not say there are no consequences. It does not say we always avoid hardship. It says there is no condemnation. Condemnation is rejection. Condemnation is being cast off. And if you belong to Christ, that is never your story.
Some circumstances come from living in a fallen world. Others come from the choices of others. And yes, sometimes we create the mess ourselves. But even when we dig our own hole, God’s covenant love does not evaporate.
Psalm 103:10–11 (NLT) — “He does not punish us for all our sins; He does not deal harshly with us, as we deserve. For His unfailing love toward those who fear Him is as great as the height of the heavens above the earth.”
That is covenant language. Unfailing love. Loyal love. Faithful love. God’s covenant with you is not fragile. It does not shatter the first time you fail. It is rooted in the finished work of Christ, not your recent performance.
Think about Peter. He denied Jesus three times — publicly, fearfully — after boldly declaring loyalty. If anyone had dug his own hole, it was Peter. Yet after the resurrection, Jesus did not reject him. He restored him. He recommissioned him. He entrusted him again with, “Feed My sheep” (John 21:17, NLT).
Negative circumstances are not proof of divine abandonment. Sometimes they are the very place where God does His deepest work.
When Jonah deliberately disobeyed God and ran in the opposite direction of what God had clearly told him to do, a violent storm came upon the sea. The sailors threw him overboard, and he was swallowed by a great fish. He remained inside that fish for three days. It must have felt terrifying and hopeless. But Scripture says:
Jonah 1:17 (NLT) — “Now the Lord had arranged for a great fish to swallow Jonah. And Jonah was inside the fish for three days and three nights.”
That fish eventually spit Jonah back onto dry land, saving his life (Jonah 2:10, NLT). What looked horrific was not rejection — it was redemption. God had not abandoned him. He preserved him, corrected him, and gave him another opportunity to obey.
Hebrews 13:5 (NLT) — “For God has said, ‘I will never fail you. I will never abandon you.’”
You may have to walk through consequences. You may have to rebuild what was broken. You may have to humble yourself and make things right. But none of that means God has stepped back in disgust.
That includes mornings after bad decisions. That includes mornings after failure. That includes mornings when you realize you helped create the mess you are now in.
God’s covenant of love is still active. Still faithful. Still powerful. The hole you are in is not proof of rejection. It may very well be the place where you discover that He was holding you all along.
Lamentations 3:22–23 (NLT) — “The faithful love of the Lord never ends! His mercies never cease. Great is His faithfulness; His mercies begin afresh each morning.”
Hebrews 13:5 (NLT) — “I will never fail you. I will never abandon you.”
Prayer: Dear Lord, when circumstances feel heavy and I begin to assume You are disappointed or distant, steady my heart with Your truth. Help me to see that Your covenant love does not flicker with my failures. If I must walk through consequences, walk with me. Correct me, restore me, and remind me that You have not abandoned me. Thank You that what looks like devastation can become redemption in Your hands. Strengthen my trust in Your faithful love, in Jesus’ name, Amen!
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