Before you read: This article is part of a larger series that builds upon itself from the foundation up, with each study building on the last. If something in this article does not make sense to you or if you believe it to be incorrect, please ensure you have read the entire series before passing final judgment. Also, be sure to visit this page’s FAQ And Objections Page

In our last study, we discovered that it is indeed possible for a Christian to lose salvation. Because of this, many live in fear—remembering what it was like to be close to God, yet knowing they have fallen away.

These are not people who merely thought they were Christians but never truly were. These are people who genuinely were Christians at one time, now having rejected Christ.

But if someone reaches a point where their heart can be softened again—is there still hope for them? These are people who have tasted and seen that the Lord is good, yet chose to walk away. No doubt, many are asking: “Can I come back to God after falling away?”

The answer is yes! There is hope for those who were once in the faith and then left it. Some may say otherwise, pointing to passages such as Hebrews 6 and 10, which we’ll examine in this study. But the truth is this: even those who once belonged to Christ still have a chance to return to Him after falling away.

What Happens When a Christian Falls Away From God

Being born again means that a person’s soul—once dead in sin and far from God—is brought to life. This new life comes from the Holy Spirit, who dwells within us. In that moment, our soul is made alive because the Spirit of God—the very breath of life—abides in us.

Job 33:4

4 The spirit of God hath made me, and the breath of the Almighty hath given me life.

John 11:25

25 Jesus said unto her, I am the resurrection, and the life: he that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live:

John 14:6

6 Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me.

When you remove yourself from Jesus, you remove yourself from life itself. You step away from the way of salvation. As a result, your soul once again becomes dead in sin. This is a serious condition—but as we will see, it is not irreversible.

Hebrews 13:5

5 Let your conversation be without covetousness; and be content with such things as ye have: for he hath said, I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee.

Hebrews 13:5 is speaking of someone who has Jesus and is content in Him. It describes a person walking with Him. The verse assures us that Jesus will not leave us behind or abandon us when we are faithfully following Him.

God does not forsake those who follow Him—that is the proper context. But He will not imprison us either. If we choose to forsake Him, He will not force us to remain with Him. He allows us to walk away.

Judges 10:13

13 Yet ye have forsaken me, and served other gods: wherefore I will deliver you no more.

2 Chronicles 15:2

2 And he went out to meet Asa, and said unto him, Hear ye me, Asa, and all Judah and Benjamin; The Lord is with you, while ye be with him; and if ye seek him, he will be found of you; but if ye forsake him, he will forsake you.

God does not change. He makes it clear that His promise to never forsake us applies only to those who do not forsake Him. When we abandon Him and turn to other gods, He will not deliver us. If we forsake Him, He will, in turn, forsake us.

Can a Person Come Back to God After Falling Away

Hebrews 6:4-6

4 For it is impossible for those who were once enlightened, and have tasted of the heavenly gift, and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost, 5 And have tasted the good word of God, and the powers of the world to come, 6 If they shall fall away, to renew them again unto repentance; seeing they crucify to themselves the Son of God afresh, and put him to an open shame.

Hebrews 10:17-18 and 26-31

17 And their sins and iniquities will I remember no more. 18 Now where remission of these is, there is no more offering for sin.

26 For if we sin willfully after that we have received the knowledge of the truth, there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins, 27 But a certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation, which shall devour the adversaries. 28 He that despised Moses’ law died without mercy under two or three witnesses: 29 Of how much sorer punishment, suppose ye, shall he be thought worthy, who hath trodden under foot the Son of God, and hath counted the blood of the covenant, wherewith he was sanctified, an unholy thing, and hath done despite unto the Spirit of grace? 30 For we know him that hath said, Vengeance belongeth unto me, I will recompense, saith the Lord. And again, The Lord shall judge his people. 31 It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God.

These are very powerful passages. At first glance, they seem to teach that once a Christian falls away, there is no path back to God. But that is not truly what they are saying.

If that interpretation were correct, it would directly contradict the following words of Jesus:

Revelation 2:4-5

4 Nevertheless I have somewhat against thee, because thou hast left thy first love. 5 Remember therefore from whence thou art fallen, and repent, and do the first works; or else I will come unto thee quickly, and will remove thy candlestick out of his place, except thou repent.

Here, Jesus Himself is speaking to people who had left their first love and fallen from grace. Yet He calls them to repent and return. If returning were impossible, He would not command them to do it.

Some argue that the “first love” in this passage refers to evangelism rather than to Jesus Himself. But that does not hold up, since one must love Jesus first before truly loving evangelism.

This is why the greatest commandment begins with loving God first, and then loving others second. Clearly, Jesus is addressing Christians who have fallen away. And just as clearly, He is asking them to return to Him.

The Prodigal Son

Luke 15:21-24

21 And the son said unto him, Father, I have sinned against heaven, and in thy sight, and am no more worthy to be called thy son. 22 But the father said to his servants, Bring forth the best robe, and put it on him; and put a ring on his hand, and shoes on his feet: 23 And bring hither the fatted calf, and kill it; and let us eat, and be merry: 24 For this my son was dead, and is alive again; he was lost, and is found. And they began to be merry.

Luke 15 tells the story of the prodigal son. Notice that this was not a servant or a stranger—it was the father’s own son.

The son left his father. But when he remembered where he had fallen from, he repented and returned. His father welcomed him back as one who had been dead and was now alive again.

This story does not begin with the son being distant. It actually begins with him in his father’s household if you read the whole story. Jesus was showing that the prodigal son represents someone who was alive and knew their Father in heaven, but chose to leave their Father.

When his hardened heart turned back to his father, he repented and returned. And his father did not reject him. Instead, he embraced him as his son. He declared: “For this my son was dead, and is alive again; he was lost, and is found.”

The prodigal didn’t need to be born again as a brand-new son—that was impossible. He needed to be raised from the dead as a returning son.

In that same chapter, Jesus tells two other parables: one of the shepherd who leaves the ninety-nine sheep to find the one that was lost, and another of the woman who loses a coin and diligently searches until she finds it.

In each of these stories, what was lost had originally belonged to the one who found it again. That is the point—there is hope for the Christian who falls away.

So if Jesus speaks of returning to God after falling away, how could the book of Hebrews be saying a person cannot return? The simple answer is this: it doesn’t actually say that.

Let’s look more closely at Hebrews 6:4–6 and Hebrews 10:17–18, 26–31.

What Does Hebrews 6 Mean

Hebrews 6:4-6

4 For it is impossible for those who were once enlightened, and have tasted of the heavenly gift, and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost, 5 And have tasted the good word of God, and the powers of the world to come, 6 If they shall fall away, to renew them again unto repentance; seeing they crucify to themselves the Son of God afresh, and put him to an open shame.

At first glance, Hebrews 6:6 seems to say that those who have known God and been Christians cannot return to Him if they fall away. But that is not what the passage is teaching. It does not say they cannot come back to Christ—it says they cannot be renewed again unto repentance.

When we read the word renew, we understand it as starting over and being made new. But when we read the word repentance, we often, without realizing it, substitute it in our minds with the word salvation. Repentance is certainly part of coming to salvation, but it is not the same thing as salvation itself.

Verses 4–6 are saying that those who have known God and been Christians cannot be renewed unto repentance. The word renewed means “to begin again, to start over from the beginning.” The word unto expresses movement toward a goal, like saying “unto the end.” It means traveling the distance until you reach a destination.

So the passage literally says it is impossible to start over from the very beginning—that first step toward Jesus. Repentance is where it all began. It was the first step you took toward Christ and salvation.

So it isn’t saying a person cannot be renewed to salvation. It is saying a person cannot go back and start over as if they had never taken that first step at all.

You cannot hear the gospel as though for the very first time again. You cannot come to Jesus as though you had never known Him before. You must pick up where you left off—as a born-again child of God.

Think of the prodigal son. He could not return to his father as if he were merely a servant, because it was impossible for him to be anything less than his father’s son. Even when he was “dead” to his father, he was still his son.

When he returned, he did not become a newly born son. Believing you have to be “born again, again” is like saying you need to be adopted a second time. That would mean Jesus would have to pay the adoption price all over again.

That is why verse 6 says they would “crucify to themselves the Son of God afresh, and put him to an open shame.” You cannot begin again as though you were never God’s child. You do not need to be readopted. God can revive His “dead son,” but no one can pretend they were never His son in the first place. Like the prodigal, you simply need to come home.

Now let’s see the full context of the subject in Hebrews.

Hebrews 5:12-13

12 For when for the time ye ought to be teachers, ye have need that one teach you again which be the first principles of the oracles of God; and are become such as have need of milk, and not of strong meat. 13 For every one that useth milk is unskilful in the word of righteousness: for he is a babe.

This is actually where the topic begins. Paul says these believers should have been teachers by now, but instead they still needed to relearn the basics. They needed to go back to the foundational truths of the faith. He continues this same thought into chapter 6.

Hebrews 6:1-2

1 Therefore leaving the principles of the doctrine of Christ, let us go on unto perfection; not laying again the foundation of repentance from dead works, and of faith toward God, 2 Of the doctrine of baptisms, and of laying on of hands, and of resurrection of the dead, and of eternal judgment.

Paul urges them not to keep laying the foundation over and over again. They don’t need to keep starting from scratch. The foundation has already been laid. They already know about repentance. Jesus has already made them children of God. There is no need to “start over.” He then carries this same thought into the verses that are often misunderstood.

Look at Hebrews 6:4-6 again.

Paul is telling us that it is impossible to start over as if we had never known Christ. We don’t need to meet Jesus for the first time again. We don’t need a brand-new foundation. When we fall away and return, we are not renewed—we are restored.

There is a difference between renewal and restoration. Renewal is about making something entirely new. For example, broken pieces of a glass vase could be melted down and reshaped into a completely new vase. That new vase is not the same one that was broken—it is an entirely different one. That is renewal.

Restoration, on the other hand, repairs what was broken. It puts the original vase back together, heals what was damaged, and makes it whole again.

So Hebrews 6 is saying this: you cannot be made brand new all over again, but you can be restored to the fellowship with God that you once had. Paul continues this thought further in the chapter.

Hebrews 6:10

10 For God is not unrighteous to forget your work and labour of love, which ye have shewed toward his name, in that ye have ministered to the saints, and do minister.

Paul explains that when you are restored, God does not forget the works you did before you fell. Your past relationship with Him is not erased. You were His child before you fell—and you are still His child when you return.

What Does Hebrews 10 Mean

Hebrews 10:17-18

17 And their sins and iniquities will I remember no more. 18 Now where remission of these is, there is no more offering for sin.

God promised to remember our sins no more. This is called the remission of sins. So when the passage says that there is “no more offering for sin,” we should ask: Why would we ever need another offering? All of our sins are forgiven through the sacrifice of Jesus. If our sins are forgiven, there is no need for a new sacrifice to forgive them again.

Notice carefully—these verses do not say that a person cannot be forgiven if they walk away. They simply say that since our sins are already forgiven through Jesus, no other offering is needed.

Hebrews 10:26

26 For if we sin willfully after that we have received the knowledge of the truth, there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins,

Here we see the same truth repeated: there is no more sacrifice for sins, even if we willfully turn away. But what does this mean? Does it mean that the blood of Jesus no longer covers us, and therefore a new sacrifice would be required? Or does it mean that there is no other sacrifice besides Jesus that can ever cover us?

Let’s look at the context to understand it correctly.

Hebrews 10:28-29

28 He that despised Moses’ law died without mercy under two or three witnesses: 29 Of how much sorer punishment, suppose ye, shall he be thought worthy, who hath trodden under foot the Son of God, and hath counted the blood of the covenant, wherewith he was sanctified, an unholy thing, and hath done despite unto the Spirit of grace?

Verse 28 points back to the Law of Moses. Under the law, when a person sinned, they had to bring a sacrifice to be forgiven. How could someone “despise” this law? By sinning but refusing to bring the sacrifice. This was disobedience—but more than that, it revealed unbelief. That person did not believe (or care) that God would forgive them through the sacrifice He had provided.

Now apply that understanding to verse 29. What does it mean to “tread underfoot the Son of God”? It means to treat the once-for-all sacrifice of Jesus as worthless, as if His blood cannot save.

The verse continues: “and hath counted the blood of the covenant, wherewith he was sanctified, an unholy thing.” Again, this means a person considers the blood of Jesus powerless and insufficient to save.

Then it says: “and hath done despite unto the Spirit of grace.” The word despite means “to treat with contempt, to disregard, to disdain.” Once more, this describes treating the grace of God as worthless, as though He had no power to save.

And here is the truth that many have missed: Hebrews 10 is not saying that a fallen Christian cannot return to the faith. It is saying that there is no other way back except through Jesus.

These verses do not say that the blood of Jesus cannot cover the sins of someone who returns after falling away. In fact, they teach the opposite!

They warn that if you consider the blood of Jesus insufficient to forgive your sins—even the sin of falling away—then you are the one rejecting the only way of forgiveness. That is what it means to “do despite unto the Spirit of grace.”

So these are not verses declaring that you can never be saved again. They are verses warning that if you reject God’s way of salvation through Christ, then no forgiveness is possible—because there is no other way!

Look closely: none of these verses say that the blood of Jesus is not enough to cover someone who has left the faith. None say that a person cannot return to Him, like the prodigal son who was alive, then dead, and then alive again.

In fact, they say the opposite. They declare that if you claim the blood of Jesus is not enough to cover all sins—even the willful sin of walking away—then you are the one despising the Spirit of grace.

These verses are not teaching that you cannot be saved. They are teaching that only those who refuse to believe God is both able and willing to save them cannot be saved. To say otherwise—to claim that God cannot, or will not, forgive the repentant soul—is nothing less than blasphemy.

How To Come Back To God After Falling Away

Now that we’ve seen from Scripture that restoration is possible, we need to understand how. Jesus tells us exactly what to do:

Revelation 2:5

5 Remember therefore from whence thou art fallen, and repent, and do the first works; or else I will come unto thee quickly, and will remove thy candlestick out of his place, except thou repent.

Jesus tells us that we must repent and do our first works. This repentance isn’t the same as when someone first comes to Him to be born again. This is the repentance of someone that is already a child of God being restored.

But what were our first works? The way you return to your Father is the same way you came to Him the first time—you came believing He would forgive and accept you. You came in faith.

If you were once a believer and have left, you don’t need to be “born again” as if for the very first time. Jesus’ one sacrifice is enough; you cannot crucify Him again. What you need is restoration, not a brand-new beginning.

Come back by repenting, returning to those first works of faith, and trusting His word. If you repent, there is hope. The Father is ready to welcome His child back home.

Isaiah 40:29-31

29 He giveth power to the faint; and to them that have no might he increaseth strength. 30 Even the youths shall faint and be weary, and the young men shall utterly fall: 31 But they that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run, and not be weary; and they shall walk, and not faint.

There’s something important to note in this passage. It says, “they that wait upon the Lord.” Renewal isn’t always instant—it can take time.

I’m often asked by people returning to the faith whether they will ever feel God like they used to. The answer is yes, but you have to wait for it. This isn’t a punishment; it’s actually how God strengthens you.

Every Christian goes through a time when God seems distant. It’s a difficult, even painful, feeling. But it is during this time that we learn to walk by faith, not by sight.

It’s easy to follow God when you feel His presence. But what happens when you don’t feel it? Do you just sit down? Do you run away? Or do you keep walking in the darkness, knowing He is still there, no matter what it feels like?

It is in these times that we must lay down our insecurities, our dependence on feelings, our own wisdom, and our pride. We learn to let go of anything that doesn’t align with His Word, because His Word is the only sure light we have.

Coming to Him in faith means you aren’t looking for confirmation, a feeling, or a sign to prove it’s real. You need to believe, even if you don’t get any confirmation—because His word is confirmation enough.

Don’t fall into the trap of trusting your feelings. Don’t be afraid. No doubt the prodigal son took some time after returning home before he felt like he belonged again. Do you think he stopped feeling unworthy the moment he walked back in the door? Most likely, he still felt that way for a while. But his feelings didn’t change the facts. And neither will yours. You have to just accept that.

In the next lesson, we will examine what Scripture calls the one unforgivable sin. I’ll explain what it is—and why it isn’t as final as you may think.

Unit 3:14 – What Is the Unforgivable Sin OR

Return To Christianity 101 Unit 3 – Repentance and Salvation

Comments (135)

  1. David

    Reply

    My story is that I was born again at the age of 23. That was 38 years ago. For the first year or 2 of my spiritual walk my life was great. The Holy Spirit helped me kick the addiction of alcohol and marijuana, and I lived a clean life, attending church every Sunday. I spent night and day in God’s Word. It was the best time of my life. However one day the frustration of still not having a job (I lived on welfare when I was born again), no money, no car, no girlfriend, and so on got the better of me. I was at the time waiting on a phone call with an offer of a job I had applied for some months ago, but I grew tired of waiting. I felt that although I had the fruits of the spirit, I had nothing else to show for it. My friends at church all had cars, money and jobs, and I shared a flat with another church-goer, a small bed, a dressing table and a robe (not mine) in my room. In hindsight, I had everything in the way of the Holy Spirit, but the desires of my flesh one day made me lash out at God in anger. I felt his love all over me and in me, telling me to just wait a little longer, yet I hardened my heart and said ‘get lost’. At that moment something left me. I knew instantly I had made a big mistake. I immediately asked God to forgive me but I knew something was different. I no longer felt the presence of the Holy Spirit. I started suffering from constant tension headaches. I could no longer read my bible without experiencing extreme tiredness. The words no longer jumped off the page at me. I was no longer directed to passages in the bible that refer to the cross, as I did previously whenever I sinned and repented, and sought God’s forgiveness.

    I tried seeking God for some weeks, months after that but nothing worked (though today in hindsight I didn’t seek him with a true broken, contrite heart for what I had done). I always found myself at the verses that referred to the unforgivable sin, and judgement, and references to those who have trodden on the spirit of grace, and so on and so on. It was a living nightmare. I stopped going to church. My well-used bible by this time was starting to fall apart (to me this was another sign that my christian walk was all over), so I threw it in the bin. Long story short, I grappled with what had occured but God was silent. He no longer ‘got all over me’ if I had the thought of not going to church, like he did when I walked with him. Though I know now (after again seeking the Lord), what actually occurred spiritually when I rebelled – for many years I didn’t. I wondered if I was ‘unborn’. My mind was in a spin. My spiritual life was empty. I moved on to alcohol and a worldly life with work associates (the job I was waiting for arrived only a couple of short weeks after this incident), to try and blot out the pain. I longed for God (and still do) but my mind couldn’t deal with my spiritual state. The church I had been attending disbanded about the same time so I had no-one to turn to. For many years, the only way I could function in life was to not think about the possibility of what had occured. I decided I was lost forever, but had to move on as best I could without the blessed Holy Spirit in my life. This ‘state’ of mind continued up until a couple of months ago, at which time realising I had huge biblical resources via the internet (of course such a thing never existed when I fell from grace in 1988), I decided to once again try and get an understanding of my spiritual state and my standing before God. I decided I would discover I was either lost to God for eternity, and that there is/was no way back, or by some slim sliver of hope there just might be a way back into the fold. Thanks to these resources, I am all but 100% convinced I did not commit the ‘unforgivable sin’, which in hindsight I believe the enemy had convinced me of committing for many many years. By faith, realising the Holy Spirit had left me as per my ignorant choice all those years before, I saw a glimmer of hope. If this is true, then it means I have commited the sin of rebellion, and that God, through his mercy, might just forgive me of this. I have repented and turned from sin. Instead of running from God, I have turned my face back to him. I continue to read and watch sermons, seeking answers, hence how I came across your post. This is an excellent website. So many teachings either dont satisfactorily address Hebrews 6:4-6 and other similar verses, or they are explained as though a born-again believer can have no hope, even if they turn to God with a contrite heart. But I have been watching some sermons by another pastor who emphasises God’s grace (https://www.youtube.com/@RyanRufusNNM) and I feel his messages are more in line with the God I once fellowshipped with. I believe all those who are damned are because they choose to be, by not wanting to accept Jesus’s sacrifice for them. I also believe God’s mercy, love, and forgiveness is far greater than anything the human mind can comprehend.

    So, in turning back to and seeking the Lord these last few months there are a couple of things that I have changed my mind on that has given me a faint glimmer of hope for my current spiritual condition. I am now convinced that I am still ‘born-again’ but that God simply took away the helper through my choice at the time ie the Holy Spirit. He didn’t leave me – I left him. And I don’t believe I committed the unforgivable sin. I have prayed, asking God that if there be any way back to him to please show me. I have confessed aloud verses such as “there is therefore now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus” by faith, and the tension headaches I had for so many years have gone. If this were not true in my case, I would think the headaches would remain? I have also found posts on the internet by other Christians that they were in the same state as me (I believe you said you were to?) but that the Holy Spirit came back to them! So, to my mind, this must mean I am still a born again Christian? Without his help I am on my own to try and figure out if I can still claim my salvation, so it’s hard to say if it’s God or just my mind, but I feel that if there is a way out of my current state, it will be through faith. The explanations on this website resonate true. To tread under foot I believe means to tell myself Jesus can not save me. That’s not my state. I believe he still can. With God all things are possible, and I believe a verse of scripture cannot override (or make untrue) another verse. So this verse I believe is addressed to those that turn or rebel against God and dont turn back. Either through choice, or through disbelief. As emphasised on this website, Israel rebelled and turned from God many times but he always welcomed them back. The prodigal son is another verse that encourages me. I believe I am still a son of God (albeit one that rejected God for a season), and therefore a member of his household. I believe that if I can return, which I am trying to do, he will accept me back as a son, and not as a servant. Maybe God is testing my faith? But truths such as “without faith it is impossible to please him” I feel bubble up from within me. IF there is a way back, I am convinced it MUST be by faith. I have to take the first step, claiming his promises, speaking his Word. I was saved by faith in the beginning. I believe I am called by God and that his word says he will complete his work in those that are chosen, but I MUST take him at his word. I feel I must start at the point of faith. I read that the sacrifice God desires on the altar is that of a broken, contrite heart (Psalm 51:17). Watching an excellent sermon on youtube the other day I momentarily felt the presence of God. If there is a way back to him, it will likely be a long road (as has been the case that I have read posted by other Christians). I need the blessed Holy Spirit back. I ask that you pray for me. I look forward to any advice or help you can give me.

    • Reply

      YES! You are absolutely right. It has always been by grace we are saved through faith.

      Here’s some extra information you should know. You can have God dwelling in you and not feel it. I’ve had to learn that there may be no “confirmation” that you have been accepted. This is because faith doesn’t require confirmation. So it doesn’t matter how you feel. The key is to trust that if He says it in the Bible then it is true if you feel it or not.

      This is what I had to learn myself. When I first came to Him I felt it. But after time I ended up feeling nothing. Then fear set in. Finally I would lose faith. Not in God, but in my own salvation.

      Eventually, after searching for a long time and also seeing other teaching on the subject that wasn’t well taught I came to a place where I had to take a step of faith with no confirmation. If God said He would not deny those that come to Him then He means it. So I decided to simply trust Him, confirmation or not.

      For a while it almost felt like “fake it until you make it”. But I knew I was not faking that I believe His word. I was trusting that I was His even if I didn’t feel like it.

      Eventually I came to understand why I went through it. It’s the testing of faith that many, if not all, of us go through. It’s where we really learn to walk by faith and not sight (confirmation).

      I have indeed felt Him since then and I have seen other confirmations that He is within. But I have also learned that the only thing which determines what is true or not is His word. His word alone should confirm it for us.

      This is something I have told people seeking to return more than anything else. Because in almost every case the people don’t feel like the Spirit is with them. But when you understand that it doesn’t matter you can begin to truly understand faith.

      If He said it He means it. If He says He will accept the prodigal son then He will. If He says He will in no way cast out those that come to Him then He won’t. So when you ask Him to take you back it is done immediately! You don’t have to feel a thing. You just have to believe Him.

      Learning to walk like this will change a lot of things. Prayer becomes different. Reality itself changes. You change. Suddenly nothing but what He said can be considered truth. If He says the mountain in front of you doesn’t exist then you trust that it doesn’t even if all your natural senses say it does.

      So if you asked for Him to forgive and accept you and you truly mean it then it is already done.

  2. Tony Collins

    Reply

    Thank you so much for this study Boy was I struggling with this as a prodigal son The devil is continually condemning me saying I went to far and God will not have me back I needed some simple clarification and this was very helpful God bless you and this ministry So many need to hear this

  3. George

    Reply

    Thank you for this. When my wife died from complications of Alzheimer’s Disease I fell away. In my anger I rejected God and told him to go away, cursing at him. I returned to agnosticism. That was in 2018. I have feared the unpardonable sin, and or losing my ability to be saved because I fell away. I hope that you are correct that having come to my senses I can return again to my Faith similar to the parable of the prodigal son. I feel at peace, thank you.

    • Reply

      That’s why I do this. Just remember one thing for me. Feelings come and go, His word remains forever. I am very happy for you to feel at peace though.

  4. Jennifer Parker

    Reply

    Thank you for being the vessel for providing answers to my questions. I am 58, the breadwinner in my home, and was arrested for a very stupid felony offense I committed years ago. I am now jobless and my Godless past is preventing me from employment in my field. I didn’t hurt anyone except myself. I have repented of my sinful life. I know these are consequences of my sin, but I want to move forward in his will, without my family having to suffer for my behavior. God bless you! Jennifer

  5. LA

    Reply

    I think I’m pretty sure I lost my salvation. I’m so tormented and distressed so much all the time because I let sin rule my life. I have no excuses. I’m just hoping the Lord will have mercy on me. I was born again when I was 9 and I was so fascinated by Jesus. I used to keep Jesus in my heart all the time and stay away from sin. I started to live a worldly life. The same sins I used to hate were the same sins I fell into. I remember when I would talk to the Lord for so long like He was my best friend because I knew He was listening. I remember when I would feel the Lord’s presence and love all over me and I’d just cry in it. I remember when He would call me out of my sin and just accept me and fill me with His love and acceptance. I remember when my faith was immovable. I remember when I had full certainty that I was accepted by Jesus. I remember when I’d just cry out to the Lord and He’d rescue me. I remember when He’d just show me His goodness and I’d cry and ask Him why He’s so good to me. I miss the Lord’s presence so much. Why didn’t I let go of sin. Sin is so empty. The Lord’s presence truly is EVERYTHING I could ask for. He’s so fulfilling. He’s everything. He is so nice and so loving when we don’t deserve it.
    I miss the Lord’s presence :((((((

    I just feel tormented all the time. Spiritually and emotionally distressed. I wish I stayed with the Lord. I have no excuses. I can’t be mad at God because all He did was be good to me. This is all my fault. The Lord is so loving and so sweet. He’s so nice. I wish I stayed with Him. He’s sooooooo nice and so kind. The Lord is so sweet. I’m nothing without Him. I wish I had stayed with Him in His loving arms. His love for us is soooo vast and He loves us so much I can’t even explain His love. :((((( He truly is the best I hope He can restore me and I can become His daughter again. Sin is NOTHING compared to the love of God.
    Prayers and advice please ?
    If anyone wants to talk please reply

    • Reply

      Do what you did in the beginning. Accept Him at His word. No need to have feelings of His presence. He hides Himself at times in a cloud the Bible says. He doesn’t always let us feel Him near. But you must walk by faith and not sight. Believe Him even if you don’t feel a thing!

  6. Daniel

    Reply

    Hi my name is Daniel. I grew up in a Christian home and was baptized as a child and was a believer. My parents divorced when I was 14 and they stopped going to church so I stopped. I fell away and lived in sin till now. I’m 22. The whole time I knew I wasn’t living like I should and that I was sinning and I fell into some really bad habits with porn and other things. I even stopped feeling bad for doing these things. I had a wake up call recently in the form of a YouTube video saying to choose God. It scared me and reminded me that I need to turn back to Christ. It’s been so long and I feel so lost. I’ve been in a terrible depression because I feel too far gone and that I don’t have any emotions or feel bad for my sins. I know God hates them and I have fear and I don’t want to do them anymore. I want to walk with God and feel the Holy Spirit again. Not only that but when I was a young teen I started getting intrusive thoughts. Thoughts that are not my own. Thoughts of selling my soul or renouncing my faith. I’ve had these non stop almost every day since I was a young teen. I’ve never given in to them even when I was living in sin because I knew they were wrong and not my own and even when I lived in sin I would never renounce God on purpose or sell my soul or anything of the sort. I’ve been compulsively repenting and trying to read my Bible. I went to church last Sunday for the first time in years and they all prayed over me which is amazing. But I guess I expected to feel something and I felt the same which put me into an even deeper depression and anxiety. I just want peace. Feel free to email me or reply thank you

    • Reply

      I know it has been a long time for this reply, and I will email you as well. The very first thing I want you to understand is that feelings are not confirmation of anything. The question is, do you believe God said He would forgive? Do you believe He meant it? What can stop Him from honoring His word?

      You will have to accept this by faith alone. There may be no feelings or anything to confirm it. But you must deicide if God tells the truth and if you believe it over what you feel or experience.

  7. R

    Reply

    I just want to say thank you for this post I’ve been struggling over the past couple years with this I was saved at a younger age around 17 fell in love with the lord and his ways and was so joyous to belong to my father I sang praises from my heart and wept for the unsaved I became baptized and even produced fruit but I struggled with lust, alcohol and depression. I joined the military at 21 married my highschool sweetheart and moved to my first base. I struggled with sin so much even after “repenting” and crying to god saying I’m sorry. I felt more and more distant from Jesus as I continued but kept going and then i came across these verses and esau and became terrified i instantly felt as though my heart became cold and the Holy Spirit had left me as I continued to willfully sin over the next few months I wept and depression came on me like it never had I felt as though I was dying from my own fear and anxiety I was contemplating suicide and the only reason I held on is because I knew what awaited me on the other side I began to seek god and fight back after coming to realization I had no other choice and yet as I fought for awhile I STILL went to my sin after all I had gone through like a fool this went on for another long while maybe 6 months of me continuing to seek god but hold onto sin and then finally after years of fighting I finally left the sin I struggled so hard with and turned back to god just a week ago I repented and gave it all up again and surrendered back to Christ and it was genuine I felt as though my heart melted and I felt peace and joy like hadn’t in years however the enemy came quick began to attack me but now I’m realizing how important gods word is and how much more powerful it is to rely on then my feelings and my worries even though my mind and heart are troubled with these things I did/ done I guess I just want to know if there is hope or have I really gone to far and is god done with me

  8. Zechariah Valenti

    Reply

    I was really starting to have the devil make this verse grow into something that it’s not while I was working on an assignment for my class (a Christian college), and I was starting to think that this meant that God was not really going to allow me into heaven, but that He was going to turn me away because I once turned away from Him. It was a lot like someone’s response. The devil really DOES want us to think that God is cruel. Thank God I found Christian wisdom on the internet (sometimes a hard thing to come by). As I was reading, the Holy Spirit was reminding me of the parable of the prodigal son, and I was reminded that that’s exactly what I am. If God is LOVE, how on His green earth could He be a cruel creator? I’m also now reminded of the parable of the sheep, and how He leaves the 99 to seek out the one. I was a prodigal son and a lost sheep. He is my Father and my Shepherd. I’m just glad the Holy Spirit led me to this page. It really helped to set me straight. Praise God!

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