Walk & Warfare | Biblical Answers for Real Christian Questions

Is God Finished With Me?

Anthony Jennings

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0:00 | 3:39

Is God Finished With Me?

If you have failed so many times that you are starting to wonder if God has finally had enough — this episode is the one you need to hear today.

In this episode, I break down what Scripture actually says about whether God ever gives up on His people, why that fear feels so real, and what the Bible's answer means for where you are right now.

In this episode:
• Why the feeling that God is done with you is one of the enemy's most effective lies
• What the Bible consistently shows about how God responds to people who have failed repeatedly
• How to receive the truth of God's faithfulness when your feelings are telling you the opposite

Walk & Warfare exists to answer the hard questions about faith, suffering, doubt, salvation, and what it actually looks like to follow Christ in the world we live in today. No fluff. No performance. Just real biblical answers for real people.

Anthony Jennings founded Walk & Warfare to give believers — and seekers — a place to wrestle honestly with the Bible and come out with something they can stand on.


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SPEAKER_00

There are seasons in life when it's easy to believe that we've already missed our chance. Maybe it was a decision that went wrong, a season of sin, a relationship that broke apart, or simply years that feel wasted. Sometimes people quietly begin to believe something like this. Maybe God could use someone else, but not me anymore. But the Bible tells a very different story about how God works with imperfect people. In fact, many of the people God used most powerfully had complicated pasts. Moses once fled into the wilderness after killing an Egyptian. David committed serious sin that brought deep consequences to his life. Peter denied Jesus three times on the night of his arrest. Yet none of those failures became the end of their story. God restored them, God continued to shape them, and God still used them. This is because God's work in our lives is not built on our perfection, it is built on his grace. Philippians 1 6 gives a powerful promise. He who began a good work in you will bring it to completion at the day of Jesus Christ. Notice the wording God began the work, and God will finish the work. The Christian life is not about achieving spiritual perfection on our own. It is about being slowly shaped and transformed by the grace of God. Sometimes that shaping happens through success, but often it happens through weakness. The Apostle Paul understood this deeply. He once pleaded with God to remove a hardship from his life, but God responded in a surprising way. In 2 Corinthians 12 9, Paul writes, But he said to me, My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness. That means our weakness does not disqualify us from God's work. In many cases it becomes the very place where God's strength becomes visible. Over the years I've seen this again and again while walking with people through some of the hardest moments of life, in hospital rooms, in seasons of grief, in moments when someone believes their story is already finished. And yet God continues to work in ways we never expect. He rebuilds what seemed broken, he restores what seemed lost. He writes new chapters where people thought the story had already ended. That is the nature of grace. God does not choose people who have perfect histories. He redeems people who are willing to trust him with their future. Psalm 37, 23 to 24 says, The steps of a man are established by the Lord when he delights in his way. Though he fall, he shall not be cast headlong for the Lord upholds his hand. Even when we stumble, God does not abandon his people. He steadies them, he lifts them, he leads them forward again. So if you ever find yourself thinking that your past has disqualified you, remember this the story God is writing in your life is not finished yet, and the same grace that saved you is still at work, shaping everything that comes next.