There is a quiet struggle many Christians never say out loud.
They believe in God. They attend church. They pray. They read Scripture. Yet deep down, there is still a lingering question: Does God truly love me?
For many, this is not a momentary doubt—it is something that resurfaces in different seasons of life, especially during pain, failure, loneliness, or personal disappointment.
When belief and emotion don’t match
One of the most common tensions in the Christian life is the gap between what we believe intellectually and what we feel emotionally.
A believer may know verses like John 3:16 or Romans 8:38–39 by heart, yet still wrestle with feelings of unworthiness or spiritual distance. This disconnect often creates confusion:
- “If God loves me, why do I still feel this way?”
- “Why do I struggle with guilt even after praying?”
- “Why does forgiveness feel real in theory but not in my heart?”
These questions are more common than many admit.
The weight of self-image and past experiences
For some people, the struggle is shaped by personal history. Negative self-image, rejection, trauma, or repeated failure can slowly form an internal narrative that is hard to break.
Even when faith is present, the emotional imprint of past experiences can still whisper:
You are not enough.
You are not fully accepted.
You are difficult to love.
When these thoughts go unchallenged, they can begin to shape how a person perceives God Himself.
What Scripture actually says—and what we miss
The New Testament repeatedly emphasizes God’s love as active, sacrificial, and unchanging. Yet many believers struggle not because Scripture is unclear, but because their lived experience feels louder than Scripture.
This is where faith becomes more than agreement with truth—it becomes a process of learning to trust that truth even when emotions resist it.
The challenge is not whether God’s love is real. The challenge is whether we can receive it without filtering it through our insecurities.
Why this question matters more than we think
The question “Does God really love me?” is not a small one. It affects:
- how we pray
- how we repent
- how we relate to others
- how we handle failure
- how we see ourselves
When this foundation is unstable, even strong believers can feel spiritually unsettled.
Voices shaped by real-life ministry
This struggle is not only theoretical. It is seen again and again in real pastoral care, counseling, and everyday ministry.
In My God, Your God, Who?, Rev. David Johns reflects on this very tension. Drawing from decades of experience as both a police officer in London and later as an ordained minister in the Church of England, he encountered people navigating pain, guilt, and questions of identity and forgiveness.
His reflections point to a simple but difficult truth many wrestle with: understanding God’s love is often shaped by how we interpret our own brokenness.
The book explores how questions like “Have I really been forgiven?” and “Can God truly love someone like me?” sit at the center of many spiritual struggles, especially for those carrying emotional weight from their past.
Moving from knowing to receiving
The journey of faith is not only about learning new information—it is about internal transformation.
Many Christians do not need more evidence of God’s love. They need space to process their doubts, heal from their past, and gradually allow truth to reach deeper than fear.
This often happens slowly, through Scripture, prayer, community, and honest reflection.
Final thought
Struggling to believe God’s love does not mean a person has weak faith. Often, it means they are human, carrying real experiences that have shaped their inner world.
The good news of the Gospel is not just that God loves humanity in general—but that His love is personal, persistent, and not easily undone by our doubts.
And for many, the journey begins with simply being honest enough to ask the question.

