A Love Letter From God - Day #20


 

LOVE LETTER FROM GOD

A Love Letter From God: You Were Never Too Broken to Be Loved

No matter what you have walked through — the shame, the silence, the long nights of wondering if God still sees you — this letter is for you.


There are moments in the Christian life when the distance feels unbearable. You have prayed and the ceiling seemed like stone. You have read your Bible and felt nothing. You have looked at your past and quietly wondered whether someone like you could truly be loved by a God so holy.

If that is where you find yourself today, I want you to stop. Breathe. And read what I believe your Father's heart is saying to you right now — because scripture tells us that God's love is not a reward for the faithful. It is a pursuit of the broken, the wandering, and the weary.

"I have loved you with an everlasting love; I have drawn you with unfailing kindness."

JEREMIAH 31:3 (NIV)

That word everlasting is not decorative. It means before you were born, before you made your worst mistake, before the season that left a mark you still carry — the love of God was already there, already moving toward you. It has no beginning you can trace and no end you can threaten.

Read the letter below slowly. Let it be more than words on a page. Let it be the voice of the One who knew your name before the world was formed.


A Love Letter From God to You

My dear child,

I have been watching you carry things that were never yours to carry alone. I see the weight of it — the guilt you keep returning to, the fear that one day I will grow tired of you, the quiet ache of feeling unseen. I want you to know: I have never once looked away.

Do you remember the night you thought it was all too much? I was there. Not distant and watching from a safe remove, but close — closer than your own breath. I was the stillness that finally came. I was the morning that followed the dark. I was the unexpected kindness from a stranger who did not know they were carrying my answer to your prayer.

You have wondered whether you are too broken for me to use. But child, look at the tools I have always chosen — shepherds with blood on their hands, fishermen who smelled of the sea, a woman at a well with a complicated past, a man on a road to Damascus with violence in his heart. I do not wait for you to be whole before I love you. I love you into wholeness.

Your failures have not disqualified you. They have become the very vocabulary through which you will one day speak hope into someone who needs to hear that redemption is real. The thing you are most ashamed of may become the thing that sets someone else free — because you will be able to look them in the eye and say, I know. And God was there too.

I know the season you are in feels long. You have been faithful in small, unseen places and the fruit has not yet appeared. But do not confuse silence with absence. Seeds do not grow noisily. Roots go deep in the dark, and what I am building in you right now is the very foundation of what I am about to release through you. Do not despise this quiet chapter. I am in it.

You do not have to earn your way back to me. You never left my heart. Come as you are — tired, uncertain, a little undone — and let me remind you of who you are to me. You are not a project I am trying to fix. You are a child I have always loved.

Rest in that today. Just rest.

With a love that will never let you go,
Your Father

What This Letter Means for Your Life Today

Reading words like these can stir something deep in us — and then just as quickly, the familiar voice of doubt can step in and say, That is beautiful, but it is not really for me. So let us anchor this in scripture, because God's love is not a feeling or a sentiment. It is a covenant promise backed by everything He is.

Romans 8:38–39 tells us that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord. Paul wrote those words after imprisonment, beatings, and shipwreck. He was not writing from comfort. He was writing from a settled knowing that had been tested in fire and proven true.

"See what great love the Father has lavished on us, that we should be called children of God — and that is what we are!"

1 JOHN 3:1 (NIV)

That word lavished matters. God does not ration His love. He does not give you just enough to get by. He pours it out — extravagantly, unreservedly, over people who have done nothing to deserve it. That is the nature of grace. That is the nature of your Father.

A Prayer for You

If you would like to respond to this letter with your own heart open before God, here is a simple prayer you can make your own:

Father, I come to You just as I am. I confess that I have sometimes believed my brokenness was bigger than Your love. Today I choose to receive what You have already given — grace without condition, love without end. Speak over the places in me that still feel unseen. Let me know, deep in my spirit, that I am Yours and You are mine. Amen.


If this letter touched your heart, share it with someone who needs to be reminded today that they are loved. Sometimes the most powerful thing we can do for another believer is simply say: God sees you. He has not forgotten you.

And if you would like more devotionals like this one delivered straight to your inbox, subscribe to the Living Faith Daily newsletter — because this kind of encouragement is what we are here for, every single day.

Did this speak to your heart?
Leave a comment below and share how God is speaking to you in this season. Your story may be exactly what another reader needs to hear today.


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