Embracing Doubt
No one is immune from doubt. We all experience questions, uncertainties and doubts. Doubt is part of human nature. People, circumstances, and hard seasons have a way of shaking what we thought we knew about ourselves and what we believe. So, when that same doubt finds its way into our faith, it shouldn’t surprise us. It’s not a sign that something is wrong with us but rather a sign that we’re human.
Throughout Scripture, God’s people asked hard questions, and He never turned away. He welcomes our doubts, meets us in our uncertainty, and invites our honest seeking. We don’t see Jesus reject Thomas but instead actually invite him to come closer and meet his doubt.
Our questions don’t diminish God’s love for us. His love remains unchanging no matter where we are in our journey. He invites us to ask and have honest dialogue. He meets us gently in our doubt and continues to show us mercy.
Unfortunately, too often Christians pull away from doubters because their questions create discomfort. It’s easier to surround ourselves with the already convinced than to sit with someone in the tension of unanswered prayers, intellectual struggles, or spiritual darkness.
But that approach to evangelism has it backwards. Walking alongside someone with doubt as they work through their questions and problems isn’t a weakness in our witness. It is the very heart of it. Jude 1:22 calls us to have mercy on those who doubt.
When we engage doubters online, we’re not called to be answer robots dispensing theological certainties. We’re called to be present and share the ultimate hope found in Jesus. Don’t let someone’s uncertainty becomes the grounds for a debate or a vulnerable confession be the trigger to offer quick fixes and correction. We need to treat doubt not like a virus to be eradicated but rather a soul taking faith seriously enough to wrestle with it.
We must welcome all questions and encourage those with doubt to ask questions and be curious. We must seek out and embrace those who questions to love and encourage them more than try to “fix” them. The goal isn’t to turn doubt into sweet belief through clever arguments or emotional manipulation. It’s to walk alongside, to listen deeply, to love without agenda.
Online ministry is an opportunity to model something countercultural. Instead of raising voices and winning arguments, we display the courage to sit with questions. To acknowledge when we don’t have an easy answer and admit our own times of doubt. Finding out why someone has the questions they do often is the door to sharing what the Bible actually says about what they are experiencing.
Apologetics are important and have a place in evangelism. But what many people struggling with faith need is someone simply willing to embrace their doubt and meet them in those questions with the same grace and mercy God shows us.
Isolation was never God’s design for those who question. A person dealing with doubt should never have to walk alone. Digital evangelism at its best creates safe places and communities where questions are invitations to deeper exploration and shared stories of transformation.




