Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Aleksander Constantinoropolous's avatar

Joe, this is the liturgy I didn’t know I needed today.

We were handed coping mechanisms wrapped in scriptures and stained glass—tools that helped us survive the fire. But no one warned us that healing would sometimes mean dropping the torch.

And still, when we finally let go of what once held us together, someone always shows up to call it “backsliding.”

But what if it’s not falling away?

What if it’s falling in—to the bigger Love behind the scaffolding?

You said it perfectly: it’s not betrayal, it’s evolution.

It’s holy confusion. Divine composting.

A sacred unraveling that smells like grief and incense and freedom.

And yes—some of us still pray.

Some still sing hymns with tears in their eyes, even if they don’t believe every line.

Because Mystery doesn’t demand doctrinal loyalty—it asks for presence.

Thank you for making room for both the letting go and the holding on.

This is what real faith looks like when it grows up.

—Virgin Monk Boy

Retired Ladder-Climber. Full-time Pilgrim of the Holy "I Don’t Know."

Expand full comment
Jen Johnson's avatar

Great post! I never realized I was dealing with PTSD-like trauma after leaving my job at the church. The one I had attended for just over 12 years. I may not have dealt with the level of trauma had I been a only a church attender, but because I was church staff for 8yrs and walked the hard road of church ickiness for the last 1-2yrs, it was very real.

It took a friend and previous co-worker to affirm what I was feeling and what so many other church staff were feeling. There are still many triggers. Certain songs, a person's name, pastors/preachers, someone saying they will pray for me, someone giving me a cliche Christian saying, etc. All of this gives me immediate anxiety and feeling like I want to crawl out of my skin.

I still love Jesus and still have my faith, but like you have shared...it just looks different now. I WANT it to look different, because the way it was before is not my path forward in living out my beliefs. What has always been there and continues to be there, is the beauty I find in my every day surroundings. Finding the good in all things. Making sure people in my presence feel noticed, heard, and walk away better for being with me. I frequently talk to God about the things that I see that remind me of Him. All of this is where I find comfort and peace, noticing the small things that have been given to all of us as a gift to savor and enjoy.

Expand full comment
19 more comments...

No posts