When “Believing for the Best” Becomes Dangerous

When “Believing for the Best” Becomes Dangerous
The Faith Paradox That’s Destroying Christian Marriages

Have you ever been told you just need to “have more faith” in your struggling relationship? That if you’d only “speak those things that are not as though they were,” your partner would change? You’re not alone, and you’re not crazy for feeling confused.
The Confession No One Makes in Church
Picture this: You’re sitting in a pew, listening to a sermon about faith. The pastor is passionate, quoting Romans 4:17, which states, “calling things that are not as though they were.” Around you, heads nod in agreement. But inside, you’re dying.
Because you’ve been “believing for the best” in your marriage for years. You’ve been “speaking life” over your spouse. You’ve been declaring they’re faithful, loving, and godly, even as their actions tell a completely different story. And now you’re caught in an impossible trap: Do you lack faith, or are you being asked to deny reality?
This is the faith paradox, and it’s destroying countless Christian marriages.
The Theological Confusion That Changes Everything
Let me be crystal clear about something that might set you free: You’ve been taught a dangerous lie dressed up as biblical truth.
The misapplication of Romans 4:17 has kept countless believers trapped in harmful relationships, confusing biblical faith with psychological denial. And the difference between these two? It’s literally life-changing.
What Romans 4:17 Actually Means
Romans 4:17 refers to Abraham’s faith in God’s promise to make him “a father of many nations.” It describes God’s creative power, “the God who gives life to the dead and calls into being things that were not” (Christianity.com).
This verse is about God’s ability to create reality, not our ability to manifest it through positive thinking.
Let me show you the difference:
Biblical Faith Is:
- Trust in God’s character and promises
- Believing God can do what He says He will do
- Hope grounded in divine action, not human wishful thinking
Psychological Denial Is:
- Refusing to acknowledge the observable reality about a person
- “Believing” someone will change without evidence or repentance
- Ignoring harmful patterns in the name of “faith”
Can you see the difference? One is about trusting God. The other is about lying to yourself.
The Toxic Pattern Destroying Your Marriage
Here’s how this plays out in real life, and maybe you’ll recognize yourself:
The Teaching You’ve Heard: “Speak those things that are not as though they were! Declare your spouse is faithful, loving, and godly, and it will become reality! If you acknowledge their problems, you’re speaking ‘death’ over them and blocking God’s work!”
The Devastating Result: This form of toxic positivity is “insincere positivity that leads to harm, needless suffering, or misunderstanding” (Kainos Project). Christians hide behind verses like “Rejoice in the Lord always” to avoid experiencing pain, whether their own or someone else’s (ChurchLeaders).
And here’s what makes it so insidious: it sounds spiritual. It feels like faith. But it’s actually destroying you from the inside out.
Five Ways This “Faith” Is Actually Destroying You
1. It Confuses God’s Sovereignty With Your Denial
Toxic positivity “denies the reality of one’s situation, embraces dishonesty, and suppresses natural emotions that God Himself experiences and that He created us to experience as well” (GotQuestions).
Think about that for a moment. God experiences anger, grief, sorrow, and righteous indignation. Jesus wept. He expressed anguish in Gethsemane. He acknowledged difficult realities rather than “speaking them away.”
So why do we think we’re supposed to pretend everything is fine?
God never promised that denying reality would change it. Faith is trusting God WITH reality, not pretending reality doesn’t exist.
2. It Violates Everything the Bible Says About Wisdom
The Bible actually commands the OPPOSITE of blind positive thinking:
“Beloved, do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits to see whether they are from God” (1 John 4:1). Christian faith is not spiritual gullibility (Crossway).
Biblical discernment “involves the capacity to judge and distinguish between good and evil, truth and deception, and align one’s actions and decisions with the will of God” (Scriptures Blog).
The book of Proverbs, an entire book of the Bible dedicated to wisdom, teaches that “a discerning person keeps wisdom in view, but a fool’s eyes wander to the ends of the earth” (Marisa Damore).
When you’re told that acknowledging problems means you lack faith, you’re being taught to be foolish, not faithful.
3. It Enables Sin and Abuse
This is where things get truly dangerous.
By refusing to “speak negatively,” you remove all accountability. The destructive partner faces no consequences because you’re too busy “believing the best” to enforce any boundaries.
Christians may use toxic positivity to avoid addressing systemic issues and injustices, “focusing solely on positivity and spiritual solutions instead of acknowledging real-world problems that cause pain and suffering” (Abtslebanon).
Translation? The person harming you never has to change because your “faith” protects them from the truth.
4. It Creates Unbearable Cognitive Dissonance
You now have THREE contradictory beliefs colliding in your mind:
- “I love my partner” (emotional attachment)
- “My partner’s behavior is harmful” (observable reality)
- “I must ‘call things that are not’ and declare they’re wonderful” (misapplied theology)
The result? Spiritual and psychological torture as you question whether you lack faith or are “speaking death” by simply acknowledging the truth.
5. It Leads to Spiritual Gaslighting
When you finally work up the courage to express your concerns, you hear:
- “You don’t have enough faith”
- “You’re speaking death over the situation”
- “If you just believed harder, God would change them”
Now you’re not only doubting your perception of reality, you’re doubting your standing with God.
This isn’t faith. This is abuse wrapped in Bible verses.
What the Bible Actually Shows Us About Faith and Reality
Want to know what biblical faith actually looks like? Look at the people God Himself called faithful:
King David wrote many Psalms where he was brutally honest, “sometimes positive and encouraging his soul, other times down and expressing fears and disappointments. This shows him processing emotions in a healthy way” (Definedbygod).
Job questioned God, cursed the day he was born, expressed extreme sadness, and went back and forth. The oversimplified Sunday School version leaves out that Job was painfully honest about his suffering (Blackgirl-affirmed).
Jesus wept, expressed anguish, and acknowledged difficult realities. He never pretended pain didn’t exist.
The Psalms demonstrate how to handle emotion and truth: psalmists “recount injustices and difficult circumstances with honest words of grief and need, then move into words of praise for God and who He is” (GotQuestions).
They don’t skip the reality, they bring reality TO God.
Why Faith-Based Relationships Suffer So Deeply From This
Delayed Truth-Telling = Compounded Damage
When you can’t name problems for months or years because it would be “speaking negatively,” patterns entrench deeper. By the time you acknowledge reality, the damage may be irreversible.
False Hope Replaces Genuine Change
Your partner never faces the consequences necessary for repentance because you keep “believing” they’ve already changed. This becomes spiritual bypassing, “using positive affirmations or prayers to suppress negative emotions or using religious beliefs to avoid taking action to address a problem” (Abtslebanon).
Isolation From the Help You Desperately Need
When struggling with issues, people in toxic positivity environments “don’t dare tell anyone, not wanting to ‘pop anyone’s comfort bubble’ or risk being judged for lacking faith. This keeps people in bondage, makes believers isolated, and creates posers and liars who fake it on Sunday morning” (The Rogue Christian).
God Gets Blamed for Your Denial
When the relationship inevitably fails, people often conclude: “I prayed, I believed, I confessed, and God didn’t show up.”
But God never promised to honor your denial of reality. He promised to be WITH you in reality.
How to Protect Yourself From This Dangerous Teaching
1. Understand What Romans 4:17 Actually Teaches
Abraham acknowledged reality (he was old, Sarah was barren) while trusting God’s promise. That’s faith (Christianity.com).
He didn’t pretend they were young. He didn’t “speak as if” Sarah was fertile. He acknowledged the impossible situation and trusted God to do what only God could do.
2. Embrace Biblical Discernment as Spiritual Maturity
Scripture calls believers to develop discernment through prayer, Bible study, and wisdom. James 1:5 says “If any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask God, who gives generously to all without reproach, and it will be given him” (Crossway, Wisdom International).
Start asking yourself:
- “What does this person’s fruit reveal?” (Matthew 7:16-20)
- “Am I seeing genuine repentance or just promises?” (2 Corinthians 7:10)
- “Would I counsel someone else to stay in this situation?”
3. Learn the Difference Between Hope and Denial
| Biblical Hope | Toxic Denial |
|---|---|
| Acknowledges struggle and pain while pointing to God’s promises (Kainos Project) | Tries to make problems go away by saying things that sound nice (Kainos Project) |
| “This is hard AND God is faithful” | “Everything’s fine! Just believe!” |
| Trusts God with reality | Pretends reality doesn’t exist |
| Creates space for genuine change | Enables ongoing dysfunction |
| Brings pain TO God | Spiritually bypasses pain |
4. Test Everything Against Fruit, Not Feelings
True wisdom involves judging relationships by their fruit. “Walk with the wise and become wise; associate with fools and get in trouble” (Proverbs 13:20). “Don’t be fooled by those who say such things, for ‘bad company corrupts good character'” (1 Corinthians 15:33) (Bible Repository).
Ask regularly:
- Is this relationship producing peace or anxiety?
- Is there growth or stagnation?
- Do I see the fruit of the Spirit (Galatians 5:22-23) or the works of the flesh?
5. Embrace Healthy Emotional Expression
You have the freedom to think and express your thoughts; God will not be upset or disappointed with you. David’s Psalms show a healthy process: “acknowledge thoughts and emotions, remind yourself of truth, and wait for God’s perspective” (Seattle Christian Counseling, Definedbygod).
6. Separate God’s Promises From a Person’s Performance
God promises:
- To be with you always (Matthew 28:20)
- To work all things for good for those who love Him (Romans 8:28)
- To never leave or forsake you (Hebrews 13:5)
God does NOT promise:
- Your spouse will change if you just believe hard enough
- Denial of reality will create a better reality
- Faith eliminates the need for boundaries and wisdom
7. Build Accountability With Discerning People
“The godly give good advice to their friends; the wicked lead them astray” (Proverbs 12:26). Discernment in friendships “involves seeking counsel from those who follow God” (Bible Repository).
Find trusted, spiritually mature people who will:
- Tell you the truth, even when it’s uncomfortable
- Help you distinguish between faith and denial
- Support your need for healthy boundaries
8. Practice Philippians 1:9-10 Discernment
“And this is my prayer: that your love may abound more and more in knowledge and depth of insight, so that you may be able to discern what is best and may be pure and blameless for the day of Christ” (Crossway).
Love WITH discernment, not instead of it.
Knowing God’s True Character: Your Ultimate Protection
Here’s what changes everything: understanding who God actually is.
God is:
- Truth (John 14:6) – He doesn’t ask you to deny reality
- Light (1 John 1:5) – He exposes what’s hidden, doesn’t hide it
- Protector (Psalm 91) – He doesn’t require you to stay in harm’s way to “prove faith”
- Wise (Romans 16:27) – He calls you to wisdom, not willful blindness
Within many churches, “believers feel they must act happy or else those around them will think they have spiritual problems or lack faith. This mindset ignores hardships and is not biblical” (Christianity).
Your Path Forward: Faith-Filled Realism
The answer isn’t to abandon faith, it’s to place faith in the RIGHT OBJECT:
✖ Wrong: Faith that denying your partner’s destructive patterns will make them disappear
✔ Right: Faith that God will give you wisdom to see clearly and strength to act accordingly
✖ Wrong: Faith that positive confession will change someone who hasn’t repented
✔ Right: Faith that God’s truth sets you free, even when that truth is painful
✖ Wrong: Faith that ignoring reality honors God
✔ Right: Faith that acknowledging reality WITH God leads to genuine transformation
A Final Word
If you’ve been trapped in this paradox, feeling guilty for seeing what’s right in front of you, hear this: You’re not losing your faith. You’re finding wisdom.
The courage to acknowledge truth isn’t a sign of weak faith; it’s a sign of mature faith. The kind of faith that trusts God enough to be honest with Him about reality. The kind of faith that believes God is big enough to handle your pain, your doubt, your fear, and your need for His intervention in an impossible situation.
You don’t need to “believe harder.” You need to believe more truly in a God who values truth over pretense, wisdom over wishful thinking, and your safety over someone else’s comfort.
That’s not just good theology. That’s freedom.
What’s your experience with toxic positivity in faith communities? Have you struggled with this paradox? Share your thoughts in the comments below. Your story might be exactly what someone else needs to hear today.
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