
075 | When Redemption Finds You: Can God Forgive the Thing You Can't Forget?
God’s Power Stories | Finding God’s Lead, How God Shows Up, Bible and Everyday Life Stories, Approaching God with Boldness
What if the thing you keep replaying in your mind—that mistake, that failure, that moment you wish you could undo—is exactly what God wants to redeem? In this emotionally raw episode of the Faith Through Fiction mini-series, I reveal the heart behind Lunacy, book two of The Lambswool Chronicles. This isn't just a story about David and his brother Eliab—it's about the devastating cost of hatred, the sacred weight of confession, and the miraculous truth that God's grace extends even to what feels unforgivable. I share how writing about David's poor choices and Eliab's murderous rage forced me to process my own need for grace, the ways I tried to earn what's already freely given, and pain from years ago that everyone else has forgotten but still haunted me. If you've ever wondered whether your past disqualifies you from God's purposes, whether your mistakes are too big for mercy, or whether you'll ever feel truly clean again—this episode is proof that redemption isn't about finding God, it's about God refusing to give up on you.
Key Takeaways
1. It's One Thing to Believe God Can Forgive You—It's Another to Accept It
I open with this hard truth: intellectual belief in God's forgiveness and emotional acceptance of it are two different battles. Many believers can quote 1 John 1:9 about God's faithfulness to forgive, but still carry shame like a shadow companion. The episode reveals that the gap between knowing and receiving grace is where most Christians get stuck. Through David and Eliab's stories, listeners see characters who wrestle with the same disconnect—and discover that accepting forgiveness is itself an act of faith that honors God's completed work on the cross.
2. Redemption Is Not a Straight Path—It's Often a Circle That Leads Us Back to Love
The episode challenges the common assumption that spiritual growth is linear. I share how I struggled to write the final chapters of Lunacy because I didn't want forgiveness to come too easily. Real grace isn't cheap, and it's always surprising. Redemption involves circling back to the same painful places, confronting shame again and again, each time learning deeper layers of God's love. This takeaway gives permission to listeners who feel like they're "stuck" or "going backwards" in their healing journey—sometimes circling back is exactly the path forward.
3. Grace Doesn't Erase the Past—It Redefines It
Drawing from Psalm 51 and David's cry "Create in me a clean heart, O God," I reveal a profound truth: God's grace doesn't pretend our sins never happened. Instead, it transforms their meaning. What was once evidence of our unworthiness becomes testimony of God's relentless love. The scars remain but tell a different story. This reframing is liberating for believers who think they must forget their past to be free from it. The episode shows that redemption allows us to remember differently—with gratitude instead of shame.
4. Your Mistakes Don't Disqualify You—Sometimes They're the Birthplace of Your Most Powerful Testimony
Both David (the beloved shepherd king who made terrible choices) and Eliab (whose rage led to accidental murder) demonstrate that God specializes in using broken people. The episode emphasizes that our failures often become the very platform from which we minister to others. Those who've been forgiven much, love much. My vulnerability about processing my own "pain from years ago forgotten by everyone but me" models how past mistakes can become present ministry when surrendered to God's redemptive purposes.
5. Confession Can Be More Terrifying Than Death—But It's the Gateway to Freedom
One of the book's key themes surfaces here: the paralyzing fear of admitting what we've done, even to a God who already knows. I explore why we'd rather carry guilt silently than confess it aloud—confession makes it real, makes it visible, forces us to face what we'd rather deny. Yet the episode reveals that what feels like spiritual death (confessing the unconfessable) is actually resurrection. The terror of confession is proof of how desperately we need it. Freedom waits on the other side of that terrifying honesty.
Key Themes
Redemption and Grace • Forgiveness of the Unforgivable • Guilt and Shame • The Lambswell Chronicles (Lunacy) • David and Eliab's Relationship • Biblical Fiction as Spiritual Processing • Psalm 51 and Repentance • The Cost of Hatred • Accidental Sin and Consequences • Living Forgiven • Faith Through Fiction Mini-Series • Brotherly Betrayal • King Saul's Reign • Second Chances • God's Relentless Pursuit • Accepting vs. Believing Forgiveness • Transformation of Enemies to Allies • The Sacred Weight of Confession • Grace That Redefines the Past
Who Will Benefit From This Episode
✓ Anyone carrying guilt over past mistakes they intellectually know God has forgiven but can't emotionally release
✓ Believers who feel their sin is too big for grace—that they've crossed a line God can't redeem
✓ People haunted by regrets from years ago that everyone else has forgotten but still replay in their minds
✓ Those struggling with the difference between knowing God forgives and feeling forgiven—stuck in the gap between head and heart
✓ Christians who've tried to "earn" forgiveness through good works, service, or perfect behavior
✓ Anyone wrestling with shame as a constant companion—wondering if they'll ever feel truly clean
✓ Readers of Legacy (book 1) ready to continue The Lambswool Chronicles journey with Lunacy
✓ People interested in how creative work becomes spiritual processing—writers, artists, creators who use their craft to work through faith
✓ Those who love biblical fiction that explores the emotional and psychological depth behind scriptural accounts
✓ Believers in the "messy middle" of redemption—not where they were, but not yet where they hope to be
✓ Anyone who needs to hear that mistakes can become ministry—that God specializes in broken vessels
✓ People struggling with family relationships marked by betrayal, hatred, or deep wounds (like David and Eliab's dynamic)
✓ Those who find comfort in Psalm 51 and David's raw honesty about sin and repentance
✓ Listeners who resonated with the previous episode about obedience and are ready for the next chapter about what happens after we fail
Redemption is but an ask away, my friend.
Until next time...
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