When God Doesn’t Fix It: Dealing with Disappointment as a Christian
A soul-level guide to dealing with disappointment as a Christian without losing hope or yourself.
Some weeks the disappointment is small. Other times it’s heavy enough to make you question everything.
The loss you didn’t expect.
The silence from heaven.
The slow unraveling of something you once called good.
You keep showing up, keep trying to trust, keep whispering prayers.
But somewhere deep in your gut you’re starting to wonder—what if this doesn’t get better?
What if God doesn’t fix it?
Faith That Survives Disappointment Isn’t Shiny
I see you, Friend.
You obeyed.
You believed.
You stayed faithful.
You sacrificed.
You forgave.
You did the things.
And still the diagnosis came.
The marriage fractured.
The child walked away.
The prayer wasn’t answered how you hoped.
You were told obedience would lead to blessing. But no one warned you that blessing might look like grief with God in it.
This is the part of the Christian walk no one talks about.
The dark, uncertain places between the miracles and the mountain tops.
The places where prayers sit unanswered and hearts ache silently.
The part where you’re still showing up to church but not sure what you believe about hope anymore.
Disappointment Doesn’t Make You Bad
This isn’t a crisis of faith.
This is where your faith gets real.
Jesus wept.
Paul begged for the thorn to be removed.
David worshiped in caves and cried out in agony.
Disappointment isn’t new. It’s not weakness. And it’s not sin. It’s the groaning of your soul in a world where things break.
The good news? God doesn’t require you to have it all together to meet you there.
He just wants you to be honest.
And, as John Piper reminds us, God wants you to embrace the life you have.
Three Soul-Level Steps to Hold Onto Hope
Say it out loud.
God, I’m disappointed. It’s okay to admit it. There’s no spiritual trophy for pretending you’re okay. Naming it helps you process it, so start there.Breathe and release one thing.
You don’t have to fix it all. Start small. Release the guilt. Release the timeline. Release the idea that your faith only counts if you’re cheerful.Pray even if it’s messy.
A whisper is enough. Try this breath prayer: “Grace covers what I can’t control.” If all you do is breathe that today—it’s enough.
You’re not broken for feeling broken. You’re not disqualified from God’s presence because you’re questioning the way things turned out.
📂 Free Download: The One-Minute Grace Pause
This printable breath prayer helps you return to peace when disappointment presses in. Designed to be simple, honest, and grounded in grace. Keep it on your mirror, journal, or phone.
Download The One-Minute Grace Pause →
God never promised a pain-free life—but He did promise He would never leave.
Even here. Especially here.
And I’m here with you, too.
Veritas et Gratia,
Kristy 💐
FAQ: Dealing with Disappointment as a Christian
How does God say to handle disappointment?
Scripture never asks us to pretend we're fine. Instead, God invites lament, honesty, and trust. Psalm 34:18 reminds us that He is close to the brokenhearted. In 2 Corinthians 1:4, Paul tells us that God comforts us so we can comfort others. Disappointment is not evidence of failure—it’s a place where God meets us with deeper compassion.How do I emotionally deal with disappointment?
Start by acknowledging it. You don’t have to explain it away or rush to fix it. Begin with breath, honesty, and one surrendered step. That could mean praying through the pain, journaling your grief, or simply sitting in God’s presence without a script. Emotional healing rarely comes through logic—it starts with permission to feel.Is it okay to be disappointed as a Christian?
Yes. One hundred percent. Jesus Himself experienced sorrow, rejection, and grief. The Psalms are full of lament. Feeling disappointed doesn’t mean you’re ungrateful or unfaithful—it means you're still invested in hope. And hope, even when bruised, is still holy.How do I let go of hurt and disappointment?
Letting go is often gradual. It may look like releasing blame, surrendering unrealistic expectations, or choosing to forgive someone (including yourself). Start by asking God what you need to release today—not forever, just today. Grace gives us space to let go slowly.What does the Bible say about being let down by people you love?
Scripture is full of relational heartbreak—betrayal by friends, disappointment in leaders, family wounds. Jesus was betrayed by Judas, denied by Peter, and abandoned by His followers. The Bible never sugarcoats human failure, but it always reminds us: God is still faithful, even when others are not.How can I keep trusting God when I feel disappointed by Him?
Bring that feeling into the light. God isn’t threatened by your honesty. Trust isn’t the absence of questions—it’s the decision to stay in relationship, even when it hurts. Often, the most courageous faith isn’t certainty—it’s showing up anyway.
Beautiful Kristy. Psalm 34 was a very significant psalm for me through the hardest of times. And Psalm 27.
In my Year of Jubilee, I heard that my realness (all of it) was exactly what God wants. There’s no call in scripture to fake anything—although I felt the compelling or pressure to fake things many times.
This is good!