Can You Lose Faith Without Losing God?

I don’t know if this blog will make people uncomfortable.

Maybe it should.

I’ve started it a dozen times, and every version sounded like I was trying to have the right answer. I don’t have one. If I did, I probably wouldn’t be writing this.

I think I’m writing it because I’m scared to admit it out loud.

People keep telling me not to lose my faith.

The thing is… I don’t think I’ve lost God.

I think I’ve lost the version of faith I used to have.

Before cancer, faith was simple. Not perfect, but simple. If something didn’t make sense, I figured one day it would. If life hurt, I believed there was a reason. If I prayed hard enough, I believed God heard me.

Now I don’t know what I believe about any of that.

I still pray.

Every scan.

Every treatment.

Every time I feel a new pain that shouldn’t be there.

Every time I sit in a waiting room trying not to imagine the conversation that’s about to happen.

I still pray.

But if I’m honest, those prayers don’t sound the way they used to.

Sometimes they’re desperate.

Sometimes they’re angry.

Sometimes I don’t even ask for anything because I’m tired of wondering why the answer keeps being no.

And that’s the part I feel guilty saying.

Because people expect someone with cancer to either become this incredible example of faith or to completely walk away from God.

I haven’t done either.

I’ve just become someone with a lot of questions.

I don’t understand why bodies betray us.

I don’t understand why medicine can only do so much.

I don’t understand why some people get miracle stories while other families leave the hospital with funeral plans.

I don’t understand why I’ve begged for things that never happened.

I don’t understand why I’m twenty-eight years old and my future is measured in scans instead of milestones.

I know all the verses people send me.

I know God is good.

I know He’s close to the brokenhearted.

I know all of that.

What I don’t know is why knowing it doesn’t make this hurt any less.

Maybe that’s what I’ve been wrestling with.

Not whether God exists.

Whether I know how to trust Him when the life I’m living looks nothing like the one I begged Him for.

There are days I feel guilty because my conversations with Him sound more like arguments than prayers.

There are days I wonder if He’s tired of hearing the same questions.

There are days I don’t open my Bible because I’m afraid it won’t say anything that makes sense to me.

Then there are days I whisper, “Please,” without even realizing I’ve started praying again.

Maybe that’s what keeps me here.

Not certainty.

Not peace.

Not some unshakable faith that never cracks.

Just the fact that even after everything, when I’m terrified, when I’m angry, when I’m exhausted, He’s still who I talk to.

I don’t know if that’s strong faith.

I don’t know if it’s weak faith.

I just know it’s honest.

And maybe that’s where God meets us.

Not when we’ve figured Him out.

But when we’ve finally stopped pretending we have.

Maybe one day I’ll have answers.

Maybe one day I’ll look back at all of this and understand what I can’t see right now.

Or maybe I won’t.

Maybe this side of heaven is full of questions that never get answered.

If that’s true, I hope God isn’t asking me to have perfect faith. I hope He’s asking me to bring Him my real one. The one that’s bruised. The one that’s confused. The one that still cries in the shower, still panics before scans, still wonders why, and still whispers His name anyway.

If you’ve been carrying the same guilt I have because your faith doesn’t look the way it used to, maybe you’re not failing. Maybe you’re just hurting.

And maybe those aren’t the same thing.

Thank you for letting me say the quiet parts out loud.

If this blog resonated with you, I’d love to hear from you in the comments. Whether you’re full of faith, full of questions, or somewhere in between, I hope you know you’re welcome here.

As always, thank you for being part of Mojo & The Mess. Your support, your stories, and your kindness continue to remind me that even in the messiest seasons of life, none of us have to walk through them alone.

Until next time,

Izzy ❤️

7 responses to “Can You Lose Faith Without Losing God?”

  1. Abigail Johnston Avatar

    I too have seen my relationship with God change in a myriad of ways. Definitely lost trust in “religion” and discovered how much the prosperity gospel impacted my overall world view. What I’m left with has deepened and strengthened with more suffering and more grief. God is still a refuge and close to the brokenhearted now that I count myself in that category.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. pioneering2cb10fe256 Avatar
    pioneering2cb10fe256

    Thank you Izzy for all your comments and thoughts!!! I’ve been wondering the same thing. I’ve come to realize that maybe GOD let’s us go through all of this as a sign for others that still having faith in GOD & HIS GRACE PROVIDED THRU THE SACRIFICES OF JESUS and the fact that we still have the faith to praise HIM is the purpose of all the issues…I don’t know, but I know I still pray and praise JESUS for HIS LOVE & SACRIFICE for us sinners!!! I’m still confused and sometimes wish I had never found out about the cancer and wish HE would have just taken my life, but I guess I’m another example of keep having faith even in the darker times and to continue praising…
    I thank you for your comments and stories.
    You make me feel like I’m not alone!!!
    Thank you,
    Gregory Wright

    Liked by 1 person

  3. mshibdonssciencelab Avatar

    Isabel, your words touched me deeply today. Thank you so much for sharing. I feel the same way quite often.
    I love you so very much.

    Like

  4. alwayselectronic06c81330f4 Avatar
    alwayselectronic06c81330f4

    I thank God every day for you. And I challenge him every day for what you are dealing with. I wish I understood or could explain. I

    Like

  5. Steele Janet Avatar
    Steele Janet

    Thank you for being so open and honest. I’m under so much stress right now. I couldn’t do this walk without God yet I feel i let him down daily.

    Liked by 1 person

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I’m Izzy

Welcome to mojo and the mess, This isn’t the blog I ever expected to write — but it’s the one I needed.

I’m Izzy, a twenty-something living (and dying) with terminal cancer, navigating the messy, heartbreaking, unexpectedly beautiful in-between. Here, you’ll find raw reflections, real talk, dog snuggles (shoutout to Mojo), and the unfiltered truth about what it’s like to face the end of your life before it really got going.

This space is for the ones who’ve felt forgotten, the ones who don’t know what to say, and the ones who are still holding on. It’s not always pretty, but it’s always honest.

Thanks for being here. You’re part of the mess now — and I mean that in the best way.

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