Browse Bible Topics
81 curated themes. Each has key verses, a short prayer, and a reflection question.
Addiction & Recovery
Recovery is not weakness. Scripture honors honest confession, daily dependence, and the long road back — and so does God.
After an Abortion
If you are carrying grief, regret, or trauma from an abortion, scripture meets you with the same words it offers anyone in pain: God is near, healing is possible, and you are not beyond forgiveness.
Alcohol & Drinking
Scripture neither commands abstinence nor approves of drunkenness. The question is rarely whether a Christian can drink — it's whether drinking is mastering you.
Am I Still Loved?
If you've been afraid God has had enough of you, scripture answers with one of its most repeated notes: God's love for you is not measured by your performance. It is fixed by his character.
Angels
Angels are scripture's quiet servants — messengers and ministering spirits, sent to serve those who are heirs of salvation.
Anger
Scripture does not treat anger as the same thing as sin. It asks us to be honest about it, slow about it, and unwilling to let it own us.
Anxiety & Worry
Anxiety is one of the most common struggles described in scripture. You are not alone, and God does not leave you in it.
Assurance of Salvation
Many believers cycle through seasons of doubting whether they are truly saved. Scripture answers this question with a sustained reassurance — your standing rests on Christ, not on the strength of your feelings.
Baptism
Baptism is a public, visible turning — a sign of what God has done internally and what we now embrace.
Caregiver Fatigue
Caring for a sick parent, spouse, or child is one of the most depleting forms of love. Scripture honors caregiving — and names a God who carries the caregiver.
Chronic Pain & Illness
Chronic pain is its own kind of suffering — relentless, often invisible, and easily misunderstood. Scripture honors the suffering of those whose healing has not come.
Church Hurt
Church hurt is one of the hardest griefs to name — because it happened in the place that promised to be safe. Scripture is not silent about leaders who harm, or about the long path back to a healthy community.
Comparison
Comparison is a thief. Scripture calls us back to our own story, our own race, the work in front of us — not the highlight reel of someone else's life.
Contentment
Contentment is learned, not gifted. Scripture treats it as freedom from the lie that the next thing will finally satisfy.
Courage
Courage in scripture is not the absence of fear; it is faithful action in spite of it, because of who is with us.
Decisions
Scripture does not promise a private vision for every choice. It promises wisdom, peace, and the company of people who know us.
Demons & Evil
Scripture acknowledges demons without exaggerating them. The believer in Christ is not their target — they are simply outmatched.
Depression & Despair
Scripture is not afraid of darkness. The Psalms cry out from it, and God meets people inside it — not after they've cleaned themselves up.
Doubt
Doubt is not the opposite of faith. Some of scripture's most honest prayers come from people questioning God to his face.
Doubt & Deconstruction
Many believers go through seasons of asking hard questions about everything they've been taught. Scripture does not punish honest doubt — and many faithful saints have walked through the same valley.
End Times
Scripture is honest that history is going somewhere — and equally clear that the day is unknown and our job is faithfulness, not prediction.
Faith
Faith is not certainty. It is trust strong enough to act on, even when the ground is shaking.
Fasting
Fasting is scripture's quiet, serious discipline — saying no to food (or something else) for a season so we can say a deeper yes to God.
Fear
Fear visits everyone. Scripture meets it the same way again and again: not by lecturing, but by reminding us who is with us.
Feeling Far From God
Almost every faithful believer goes through seasons when God feels far away. Scripture treats these seasons as common — and as often the place where deeper faith is forged.
Financial Stress
Scripture names money plainly — both the fear of not having it and the trap of loving it. God promises to be near in both.
Forgiveness
Forgiveness is rarely a single moment. Scripture treats it as a long obedience — and a deep freedom.
Friendship
Friendship in scripture is treated with weight. The best friendships sharpen us; the deepest one is Christ's own.
Generosity
Generosity is contagious in the kingdom. Scripture asks us to give not because God needs it, but because giving is how the heart breaks free of its grip on stuff.
Going Through Divorce
Divorce is one of the most painful experiences a person can go through. Scripture does not minimize it — and does not condemn the divorced.
Gossip & The Tongue
Few sins are more socially acceptable and more spiritually corrosive than gossip. Scripture treats words as creating reality — for good or for harm.
Gratitude
Gratitude rewires the soul. Scripture commands it not because God needs our thanks, but because we need to give it.
Grief & Loss
Grief is not unbelief. Scripture is honest about loss — and honest about a God who draws near to those who mourn.
Guilt
Healthy guilt points us back to God; toxic guilt keeps us hiding. Scripture invites us out of the bushes and into mercy.
Healing
Healing is real in scripture, and it is complicated. God heals. Sometimes the healing comes through doctors and time. Sometimes the deepest healing is the one we didn't know we needed.
Hearing God
God still speaks. Scripture suggests we hear him less often in dramatic voices than in scripture, conscience, counsel, peace, and providence — and most often through his Word.
Heaven
Heaven is more than a destination — scripture pictures it as God dwelling with people, every tear wiped, every wrong made right.
Hell
Hell is one of the hardest topics in scripture. The Bible neither soft-pedals it nor centers it — Christ comes to save, not to threaten.
Holy Spirit
The Holy Spirit is the unmistakable presence of God — comforting, convicting, gifting, and growing the people of God from the inside.
Honesty & Lying
Scripture makes truth-telling foundational — and treats deception, even small deception, as serious. God's people are called to be a people whose word can be trusted.
Honoring Parents
Honoring parents is one of the Ten Commandments — and one of the most quietly complicated. Scripture is clear about the call and honest about the cost when families are broken.
Hope
Christian hope is not optimism. It is a settled trust that the story is going somewhere, and the One writing it is good.
How to Pray
Prayer is not eloquence — it's honesty. Scripture offers a model and dozens of examples, most of them messy.
Humility
Humility is not thinking less of yourself — it is thinking of yourself less. Scripture treats it as the soil where every other virtue grows.
Identity
Scripture does not start with what you do; it starts with whose you are. Your identity is not earned, and it cannot be taken.
Illness & Health
Sickness is hard and God is near. Scripture does not promise easy healing in every case — but it promises that no body is forgotten.
Infertility
The longing for a child is one of the deepest aches scripture knows. The Bible names that ache by women whose stories went both ways — and God meets every one of them.
Jealousy & Envy
Envy is one of the quietest poisons. Scripture treats it with honesty and offers contentment as the antidote — not pretending, but renewing the mind.
Job Loss
Losing a job is not just a financial event — it's a hit to identity, rhythm, and security. Scripture knows the weight, and God is not embarrassed by your fear.
Joy
Joy is not the same as happiness. Scripture treats it as a deep gladness that survives bad days — because its source is bigger than your day.
Loneliness
Loneliness is one of the deepest aches a person can carry. Scripture does not shame it — it answers it with the promise of presence.
Love
Scripture does not define love by feelings. It defines it by Christ — patient, kind, costly, and unafraid.
Lust & Sexual Sin
Sexual struggle is one of the most common — and most isolating — battles in Christian life. Scripture treats it with honesty, hope, and a clear road back.
Marriage
Marriage is a covenant, not a contract. Scripture treats it as serious, sacred, and possible — even on the hard days.
Mental Illness
Mental illness is real, and faith in Christ is not contradicted by needing treatment for it. Scripture does not shame the suffering — and modern medicine is one of God's good gifts.
Miscarriage & Pregnancy Loss
There are few griefs less acknowledged and more weighty than pregnancy loss. Scripture honors the baby that was, the love that was real, and the parents who are now carrying both.
Parenting
Parenting will surface every weakness you have. Scripture asks God to be a parent to parents — patient, faithful, and slow to anger.
Patience
Waiting is a discipline scripture treats as central, not optional. Patience is not passivity — it is trust under pressure.
Peace
The peace scripture offers is not the absence of trouble. It is the presence of Christ, settling the soul in the middle of it.
Perseverance
Faith is often a long, ordinary loyalty. Scripture honors the people who simply did not quit.
Pet Loss
Losing a pet is real grief. Scripture honors the goodness of animal life — and the love between humans and the creatures God has put in our care.
Pride
Pride is hard to see in ourselves. Scripture treats it as one of the most dangerous things in a human heart — and humility as one of the loveliest.
Purpose & Calling
Scripture does not give most of us a single dramatic calling — it gives us a faithful path, walked one day at a time.
Repentance
Repentance is not groveling. In scripture it is a turn — a change of mind that becomes a change of direction.
Rest
Rest is not a reward for finishing — it is built into the rhythm God gave us. Scripture honors it as obedience, not laziness.
Salvation
Salvation is not a reward earned by being good enough. Scripture treats it as a gift, received — by trusting Christ, who already did the work.
Self-control
Self-control is not white-knuckling — it is the Spirit's work in us, day after day, choice after choice.
Self-Hatred
Self-hatred is a particular pain — quieter than crisis, louder than ordinary low mood. Scripture answers it with the steady word that God has made you, loves you, and is not finished with you.
Sexuality & Faith
If you are wrestling with sexuality and faith, please know first: you are loved by God as you are right now. Scripture's word to anyone in inward conflict begins with that.
Shame
Shame whispers that you are the problem. Scripture answers with a different word: beloved.
Singleness & Dating
Scripture treats singleness as a real gift, not a holding pattern. Paul preferred it; Jesus practiced it; many faithful believers live whole lives in it.
Spiritual Warfare
Scripture is clear that there is a real spiritual conflict — and equally clear that the victory has already been won in Christ. Our part is to stand.
Suffering
Scripture never tells the suffering to pretend they are fine. It sits with them in the dust — and refuses to look away from a God who suffers too.
Temptation
Scripture is plain: temptation is common, escape is provided, and you are not the first to want to give in.
Tithing & Giving
Tithing is one practice scripture treats both seriously and freely. The numbers matter less than the heart underneath them.
Trauma & PTSD
Trauma leaves marks on the body and mind that don't simply lift by willpower. Scripture meets the traumatized — and modern therapy is one of God's gifts for healing.
Trust
Trust grows in the gap between what we know and what we cannot see. Scripture asks us to trust a God who has shown himself trustworthy.
When a Spouse Is Unfaithful
If your spouse has been unfaithful, what you're carrying is not exaggerated by anyone but underestimated by most. Scripture takes covenant betrayal seriously — and offers comfort to the betrayed.
Wisdom
Scripture promises wisdom to anyone who asks — not always certainty, but enough light for the next step.
Work
Scripture treats ordinary work with weight: it is one of the places we serve God and one another, even when it is hard or hidden.
Worship
Worship is the heart's primary work. Scripture treats it as both a posture (every day, every breath) and a practice (gathering, singing, lifting hands, kneeling).