“If you need wisdom, ask our generous God, and he will give it to you. He will not rebuke you for asking.” – James 1:5
Let’s be honest—most of us have been taught, in one way or another, that doubt is dangerous. That asking too many questions might somehow weaken our faith. So we learn to quiet the questions. We push them down, smile politely, and tell ourselves, “Just believe.” But what if that’s not what God wants at all?
What if curiosity—real, honest, searching curiosity—is actually a doorway to deeper faith? God isn’t intimidated by your questions. He’s not pacing heaven, nervous that you might “figure something out” or wander too far. He invites you closer—even in your uncertainty.
Some of the most faithful people wrestled with big questions. “Why, God?” “How long?” “Where are You?” These aren’t signs of weak faith; they’re evidence of engaged faith. A faith that cares enough to ask is a faith that’s still alive.
Sanctified curiosity is different from cynical doubt. Cynicism pulls away and shuts down. Curiosity leans in. It says, “God, I don’t understand this—but I want to.” It keeps the conversation going. And maybe that’s the key: keeping the conversation going.
When you stop asking questions, your faith can quietly become shallow—not because you meant for it to, but because you stopped exploring. But when you bring your questions to God, something shifts. You move from pretending to trusting. From surface-level belief to a deeper, more resilient faith.
Here’s the beautiful part: God doesn’t require you to have everything figured out before coming to Him. He doesn’t say, “Clean up your theology, then we’ll talk.” He says, “Come as you are.” Confusion, curiosity, and all.
So what questions have you been afraid to ask? Maybe it’s about something in your life that doesn’t make sense. A prayer that hasn’t been answered. A piece of Scripture that feels confusing. A season where God feels distant.
Instead of burying those questions, try offering them. Not as accusations, but as invitations. “God, help me understand.” “God, where are You in this?” “God, what are You teaching me here?”
Give yourself permission to be curious. Because God isn’t afraid of your doubt—He meets you in it. And sometimes, the questions you’re most afraid to ask are the very ones that lead you closest to Him.
Discussion Questions:
- What’s one question or doubt you’ve been hesitant to bring to God, and what has held you back from asking it openly?
- How can we tell the difference between healthy, “sanctified curiosity” that draws us closer to God and doubt that pulls us away from Him? Would you like me to add a few optional follow-up prompts for group discussion?