02/05/2026
To leave a faith because you finally stopped lying to your own heart isn’t weakness. It’s often the beginning of repentance in its truest sense - not turning away from God but turning toward Him with honesty. God doesn’t ask women to shrink, to endure erasure or to sanctify silence. He calls us daughters, witnesses and bearers of divine image.
If God is love, then anything that consistently crushes the human soul must be brought into the light. And God doesn’t fear that light.
This is the sound of a conscience awakening. In Christianity, we believe that the human heart isn’t an enemy of God but one of the places where God speaks most clearly. We are created in the image of God - not as fragments to be managed but as whole persons whose dignity is sacred (Genesis 1:27).
Jesus never asked people to silence their humanity in order to be faithful. Again and again, He moved toward those whose bodies, voices and questions had been controlled or dismissed, especially women. He didn’t tell them to endure injustice quietly; He restored their voice, their agency and their worth. Where systems reduced people to rules, Christ looked at the person and said, “You are seen.”
Christian faith doesn’t begin with law written on paper but with love written on the heart. As the Apostle Paul writes, “Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom” (2 Corinthians 3:17). Freedom here isn’t chaos - it’s the freedom to be fully human before God, to speak, to question, to weep and to tell the truth without fear.
Your grief matters. Christianity takes grief seriously. Jesus Himself wept. He didn’t rush people past sorrow or shame them for their honesty. The truth isn’t something we force ourselves to accept against our conscience; truth is someone who meets us in love. Christ says, “I am the way, the truth, and the life” (John 14:6) - not a system to survive but a life to be healed into.
#الله
#إيمان