We Who Wrestle With God - Perceptions Of The Di... May 2026

This piece is written as a reflective essay or blog post, suitable for a literary, philosophical, or spiritual publication. By J. H. Emerson

And it means embracing the limp. The goal of the wrestling match is not to pin God to the mat. The goal is to hold on long enough to hear Him whisper a new name over us—even as our hip gives way. To everyone reading this who has lain awake at 3 a.m., arguing with a God who feels both absent and intrusive; to everyone who has closed a Bible in frustration only to open it again the next morning; to everyone who has lost an old version of faith and is terrified that nothing new will rise to take its place— We Who Wrestle with God - Perceptions of the Di...

It means understanding that the opposite of faith is not doubt—it is indifference. Doubt is the language of someone still engaged. As the theologian Paul Tillich wrote, “Doubt is not the opposite of faith; it is an element of faith.” This piece is written as a reflective essay

There is a scene in the Book of Genesis that haunts the human imagination like no other. It is not the parting of the Red Sea, nor the burning bush, but a quiet, desperate struggle on the bank of the Jabbok river. A man, alone in the dark, grapples with a stranger until dawn. When the stranger dislocates his hip with a single touch, the man—Jacob—refuses to let go. “I will not let you go unless you bless me,” he demands. Emerson And it means embracing the limp

And you will walk away—changed, wounded, and somehow whole.

You are not losing. You are wrestling.

“We who wrestle with God” is not a confession of weakness. It is a badge of honor.