– Restoration reaches even what you tried to forget.
There’s a version of you that no one really knows.
Not your coworkers.
Not your friends.
Not even those who’ve seen you cry.
It’s the version of you that silently carries the shame of what you *survived*… but never processed. The one that got good at smiling and saying, “I’m fine,” even when you weren’t. The one that buried certain memories so deep, you almost convinced yourself they never happened.
But God didn’t forget.
Not in a haunting way—
In a healing way.
He remembers what you tried to erase… because He’s the only One who can redeem it.
Hidden Pain Doesn’t Mean Forgotten Healing
We often assume God only works with the parts of us we’ve made presentable. The parts we’re willing to place on an altar. But He’s not just the God of your praise hands—He’s also the God of the tears you never let fall.
“He heals the brokenhearted and bandages their wounds.” — Psalm 147:3, NLT
Notice it says bandages—not ignores. That means God treats your wounds personally, not passively.
That Thing You Never Talk About? He Still Wants It.
There’s a story in your life you swore would stay closed. You built walls around it. You changed how you tell it—or stopped telling it altogether. Maybe it happened in childhood. Maybe it was that one relationship. That season you shut down. That night you regretted everything.
But God’s healing doesn’t stop where your silence begins.
He doesn’t flinch at what hurt you.
He doesn’t reject what disappointed you.
And He doesn’t shame what you’ve hidden—He restores it.
“I will give you back what you lost…” — Joel 2:25, NLT
And when He does, you won’t just be functioning again.
You’ll be whole.
Healing Feels Like a Risk—But It’s Worth It
Letting God into the hidden rooms of your heart takes courage. The truth is, the pain you’ve concealed for years won’t disappear overnight. Restoration is a *process*, not a performance. But little by little, healing begins to appear:
- In conversations you never thought you’d be able to have.
- In peace you never imagined feeling again.
- In laughter that doesn’t come with guilt.
- In the mirror—when you finally look and don’t flinch.
That’s not forgetting what happened.
That’s proof that He touched what happened—and made you new.
District Elder & Pastor Harold Robertson, Jr. is a seasoned IT Professional and spiritual leader who bridges technology and faith to drive innovation in schools, churches, and communities. With certifications in ITIL, Google Workspace, AI, and church administration, he empowers organizations to thrive through strategic tech integration and leadership.
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