There are moments in life when faith feels strong — and emotions feel anything but.
You love Jesus.
You trust God.
And yet… you still feel anxious, overwhelmed, discouraged, or emotionally worn thin.
For many believers, this tension creates confusion. We wonder:
But Scripture never presents faith and emotions as enemies.
Instead, the Bible shows us something far more honest and hopeful:
Faith and emotions were always meant to meet — not compete.
Throughout Scripture, we see faithful people experiencing the full range of human emotion.
Faith doesn’t eliminate emotions.
Faith gives us a place to bring them.
God is not threatened by your feelings — and He does not ask you to pretend they aren’t there.
I felt deeply confused in the months and years surrounding the birth of my three kids. I was brand new to my faith, and I had somehow picked up a few lies fairly quickly.
Lies like:
– Christians are happy and put together – don’t let them know.
– God is looking down on you for how out of sorts you are.
– You need to get yourself in shape to approach Him.
But the truth was, I was going through postpartum depression and didn’t know it. My tumultuous emotions weren’t evidence that I was a less-than-believer nor that I had something to hide.
They were simply the result of my hormones in upheaval and evidence of mastitis and sleeplessness.
And while I thought I needed to stuff down all the anger, resentment, and fear I felt, I was really ignoring the invitation to open up to others and draw near to Jesus.
Many of us learned — intentionally or not — that “being strong in faith” meant staying positive at all costs.
So we learned to:
But buried emotions don’t disappear.
They surface later as anxiety, burnout, resentment, numbness, or physical exhaustion.
Joy doesn’t grow through avoidance.
Joy grows through honesty — anchored in Jesus.
When faith and emotions meet, we begin to experience healing that is both spiritual and emotional.
Even though my hormones eventually began to resolve through intentional natural wellness habits and time, I really wasn’t out of the woods of joylessness.
Because life, right?
I ran into a mountain that felt insurmountable about a decade ago. It looked like burnout and breakdown. Because that’s what one of our kids was experiencing, and we felt helpless.
And truth be told, that mountain only grew over the next four years as we hit crisis upon crisis within our family.
Despair set in.
God had guided me to create this blog—Joy Let Loose—and I was struggling to find it myself. Here I was, writing continual posts about letting the joy of the Lord strengthen us, and I was in a pit.
How I needed a breakthrough.
I’m tearful looking back. Because my body still remembers the pain.
And because Jesus was so kind to keep calling me toward His JOY.
Let’s say this clearly:
Needing emotional support does not mean your faith is weak.
Mental and emotional wellness are part of how God designed us — mind, body, and spirit working together.
That’s why things like:
are not replacements for faith — they are often answers to prayer.
If this is something you’ve wrestled with, I want to gently encourage you.
God frequently heals through community, wisdom, trained professionals, and tools — not only through moments at the altar.
When faith and emotional wellness meet, something beautiful begins to happen.
You learn to:
This is not about fixing yourself.
It’s about forming a life rooted in Christ that can hold real emotion.
As I look back on the depth of confusion I felt in those years with babies and young children, and on the kind invitation of God toward Therapy, EMDR, and healthy healing practices in the literal crisis season, I’m so grateful.
Because He walked so patiently with me as I began to heal, and joy emerged.
And because He prepared me to handle new mountains—like a pandemic, my mother’s illness and death, and the new season of empty-nesting—differently. The JOY of the Lord became my STRENGTH.
He helped me form new habits, walk in vulnerability with others, and rely on Him when pain was persistent.
Here are gentle, faith-anchored practices you can begin using right away:
Before you correct an emotion with truth, acknowledge it.
“Lord, I feel anxious.”
“God, I feel disappointed.”
“Jesus, I feel overwhelmed.”
Naming emotions reduces their intensity and invites God into honesty.
Instead of using Scripture to silence emotions, use it to anchor them.
Try pairing feelings with truth:
Truth becomes comfort, not correction.
Joy grows through daily practices, not emotional pressure.
Simple rhythms might include:
These are not “extra.”
These rhythms are stewardship.
Spiritual growth and emotional healing rarely happen all at once. Hear that today.
Because you are being formed. And formation and healing take time, presence, and patience.
Often God heals:
Grace meets you every step of the way.
When faith and emotions meet, joy becomes deeper — not louder.
You stop striving to feel happy
and begin learning how to live anchored.
And you discover that:
Instead, Jesus meets you in the middle of it all.
Not after you calm down.
Or once you’ve figured it out.
And not when your emotions behave.
Right where you are.
If you’re longing for joy that feels steady, honest, and rooted — not forced — you’re in the right place.
This is what it means to let JOY loose.
Praying for you on your joy journey.
Elizabeth Joy
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