He beat her. She forgave him.
He found Jesus. She found Xanax.
Guess who gets the mansion in the sky?
This isn’t a parable.
It’s a pattern.
One I’ve seen in pulpits, pews, prison ministries, and the rehab circuit.
He sins.
He repents.
He’s celebrated.
She survives.
She struggles.
She’s forgotten.
⚖️ When Forgiveness Becomes a Performance
There’s this strange theology that says
“Grace is for everyone”
but acts like it’s reserved for the ones who caused the pain—
not the ones still choking on it.
He gets a testimony.
She gets a trauma response.
He gets applause for being “changed.”
She gets asked why she’s still angry.
🧠 The Psychological Damage of Spiritual Inequality
Redemption without accountability is just a rebrand.
Forgiveness without justice is just gaslighting in a robe.
And when you grow up watching churches canonize abusers
because they cried on stage
and memorize the right verses—
you start to wonder:
Who’s heaven really for?
The ones who harmed? Or the ones who endured it?
✝️ When God Wasn’t the Problem—But Heaven Was
I didn’t stop believing in God.
I just couldn’t stomach the seating chart.
Because if grace is free, but safety costs everything—
who’s really being saved?
If heaven’s filled with the same men
who silenced me on Earth,
what exactly am I being promised?
😤 Raw Truth for the Deconstructed Soul
- Some sins are washed clean faster than some survivors are heard.
- Some churches would rather “save” the abuser than sit with the abused.
- Some of us didn’t lose faith—we just stopped calling it faith when it started to look like erasure.