Guiding hearts for spiritual formation through suffering
There is a space in the Christian life that few people name and even fewer know how to hold.
It is the space after the prayer has been prayed but before it is answered.
The space after the loss but before new life has taken root.
The space where the old story has ended, yet the new one has not begun.
It is the space between grief and glory.
Many of the women I walk with find themselves here. Faithful. Still loving Jesus. Still showing up. And yet quietly weary. Quietly aching. Quietly wondering whether God still sees them in the middle of what feels unresolved.
This is the sacred middle.
And it is not a detour.
It is formation.
Between grief and glory is a liminal place. It is unsettled, tender, and often lonely. It does not look like victory. It does not resolve neatly. There is no ribbon tied around it.
In faith spaces, we are often uncomfortable with what cannot be quickly r...
To the wounded Christian grieving alone—
There is a particular kind of loneliness that comes when suffering outpaces language.
You still believe. You still love God. You still show up to church, open Scripture, whisper prayers when you can. And yet, your body tells a different story. Your chest tightens when you try to pray. Your shoulders stay raised, braced for impact. Your nervous system never quite settles, even when the words of faith are familiar.
Many faithful believers live here—caught between sincere belief and embodied exhaustion. We know what is true, but we do not feel safe enough to rest in it. This is not a failure of faith. It is a signal that grief has lodged itself somewhere deeper than cognition.
This is where embodied spiritual formation becomes not optional, but essential.
Christian formation h...
There is a quiet shift happening in Christianity.
It is not always loud enough to trend online.
It does not always come with public deconstruction stories.
But it is steady.
Many believers are not leaving Jesus.
They are leaving environments where their pain has felt unsafe.
They are searching for Christian grief support that does not rush resurrection.
They are longing for faith-based healing that honors the nervous system.
They are seeking spiritual mentorship that listens before it teaches.
This is not rebellion.
It is hunger for sacred presence.
For decades, churches have emphasized right belief, strong doctrine, and faithful service.
These are good gifts.
But many people quietly discovered that information alone does not heal trauma.
Correction alone does not soothe grief.
And busyness does not produce intimacy with God.
When ...
To the weary heart reading this—
There are seasons when prayer feels impossible.
Scripture does not deny this reality. It names it.
“How long, O Lord? Will You forget me forever? How long will You hide Your face from me?” (Psalm 13:1, NASB95).
Not because faith is gone, or because desire has dried up, but because the well of words is empty. Grief has a way of doing that. Trauma does, too. Suffering presses so deeply on the chest that even familiar prayers feel unreachable, as though they belong to someone else, in another life, before everything fell apart.
Many who come to Between Grief & Glory describe this moment with quiet shame.
I want to pray, but I do not know how. I believe God is near, but I cannot speak to Him. I open my mouth, and nothing comes out.
If this is you, let me say this gently and without qualification: you are not failing at prayer.
You are encountering the honest limits of language in the face of...
Christian grief support in the in-between space between grief and glory
There are questions many believers carry quietly:
Is it sin to question God?
Am I dishonoring Him if I say this hurts?
Why does my church feel unsafe for wrestling?
Why did suppressing doubts eventually fracture my faith?
These are not rebellious questions.
They are human ones.
And they surface most often in the in-between — the long stretch between grief and glory. The space where hope feels fragile, prayers feel unanswered, and faith feels less like victory and more like endurance.
If we are going to talk honestly about Christian grief support, we have to talk about that space.
Suffering does not politely wait until our theology feels tidy.
It interrupts.
It destabilizes.
It exposes the places where our faith-based healing has been more conceptual than embodied.
Scripture is not silent about this collision.
In Lamentations 3, the prop...