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7 Signs Your Faith Is Deeper Than You Think (And Why That Matters Now)

7 Signs Your Faith Is Deeper Than You Think (And Why That Matters Now)

Brian Nguyen

Brian Nguyen

5h ago·6

You know what? I’m going to say something that might ruffle some feathers: most of us are way more faithful than we give ourselves credit for. We’re so busy comparing our quiet, messy, real-life faith to the Instagram-worthy, mountaintop testimonies we see online that we miss the obvious. Your faith isn’t shallow—it’s just buried under the noise of daily survival. And honestly? That’s exactly where it needs to be right now.

I’ve been there. Staring at my ceiling at 2 AM, wondering if I’m “doing enough” or “believing hard enough.” But here’s what I’ve found: God doesn’t measure faith by the volume of your prayers, but by the stubbornness of your trust. Let me show you seven signs that your faith is deeper than you think—and why that discovery could change everything.

person looking at a sunrise with hands slightly raised, peaceful expression
person looking at a sunrise with hands slightly raised, peaceful expression

1. You’re Still Praying Even When It Feels Like Talking to a Wall

Let’s be honest: if faith were all about answered prayers and emotional highs, we’d all be spiritual athletes. But the real test? You keep showing up. Even when your prayers feel like they bounce off the ceiling. Even when you’re tired, angry, or just numb.

I remember a season where my prayers were literally just: “God, I don’t have words. You know.” That’s it. And yet, I kept coming back. That persistence? That’s not weak faith—that’s the stubborn, roots-deep kind that doesn’t depend on feelings. You’re not praying because you’re holy; you’re praying because something in you refuses to let go. That “something” is the Holy Spirit holding you steady.

2. You Question More Than You Used To

Here’s a shocker: doubt isn’t the enemy of faith—it’s the refining fire. If you’re asking hard questions about suffering, about injustice, about why your prayers seem unanswered, you’re not losing your faith. You’re actually deepening it.

I used to think having questions meant I was spiritually weak. But then I read the Psalms. David literally screamed at God. He asked “why?” more times than I can count. And guess what? God called him a man after His own heart. Your questions aren’t rebellion; they’re intimacy. You’re not walking away—you’re digging deeper.

open Bible with a coffee cup beside it, warm lighting
open Bible with a coffee cup beside it, warm lighting

3. Your Faith Looks More Like Love Than Theology

This one hit me hard a few years ago. I realized I could argue theology all day, but if I wasn’t showing up for the people in my life—the messy, annoying, broken ones—my faith was hollow. The deepest faith is the one that looks like love when no one is watching.

You might not have the perfect “sinner’s prayer” memorized, but you’re the one who brings meals to sick neighbors, listens without judgment, and forgives when it hurts. That’s not just being a good person—that’s the fruit of a faith that has taken root in your heart. Love is the ultimate sign of spiritual maturity, and you’re doing it every day without a spotlight.

4. You’ve Stopped Trying to “Fix” Your Life

Here’s the paradox: real faith doesn’t try to control everything. When you were new to faith, you probably thought: “If I just pray hard enough, God will fix my marriage, my job, my health.” But now? You’ve learned that some storms don’t pass—you just learn to sail through them.

I’ve found that the most mature believers are the ones who say: “I don’t know what God is doing, but I trust Him anyway.” That’s not passive resignation; it’s active surrender. You’ve stopped trying to be the director of your life and started letting God write the script. That’s a deeper faith than any mountaintop experience.

5. Your Faith Works on Monday Morning, Not Just Sunday

Let’s be real: it’s easy to feel spiritual in a worship service with the lights dimmed and the band playing. But your faith is tested in the grocery store line, the traffic jam, and the difficult conversation with your boss.

If you find yourself whispering prayers under your breath while folding laundry, or asking God for patience before a tough meeting, you’re living out a faith that’s integrated into your life—not compartmentalized. That’s the deepest kind of faith: the one that turns everyday moments into sacred spaces. You don’t need a retreat to connect with God; you’ve learned to find Him in the mess.

person working at a desk with a small cross or Bible visible, soft natural light
person working at a desk with a small cross or Bible visible, soft natural light

6. You’re More Comfortable with “Not Knowing”

I used to need all the answers. I wanted a neat, boxed-up theology that explained everything. But life—and God—doesn’t work that way. Real faith grows in the space between what we know and what we trust.

You might not understand why your prayer wasn’t answered the way you wanted. You might not have a tidy explanation for suffering. But you’ve stopped needing one. You’ve learned to sit in the mystery and still say, “I trust You.” That’s not weak faith—that’s the faith of Job, of Abraham, of every saint who walked into the unknown with only God’s hand to hold.

7. You’re Still Here, Despite Everything

This is the biggest sign of all. You’re still reading this. You’re still seeking. You’re still showing up. Life has thrown punches—loss, disappointment, betrayal—and you’re still standing. Not because you’re strong, but because something stronger is holding you up.

I’ve had moments where I wanted to walk away. Where I thought, “This is pointless. God doesn’t hear me.” But something kept me tethered. That something is the Holy Spirit, the quiet anchor that doesn’t let go even when we try to drift. If you’re still here, your faith is deeper than you think. You’re not just surviving—you’re being transformed.

Why This Matters Right Now

Here’s the truth: we’re living in a time that demands deep faith, not shallow religion. The world is loud, chaotic, and full of pain. Surface-level belief won’t sustain you. But the faith you’ve been quietly building—the one you thought was small and weak—is exactly what you need.

You don’t need to have it all figured out. You don’t need to be a spiritual superstar. You just need to keep showing up, keep loving, keep trusting. That’s the faith that moves mountains—not because it’s loud, but because it’s real.

So here’s my challenge to you: stop comparing your faith to someone else’s highlight reel. Look at the evidence in your own life. You’re praying, questioning, loving, surrendering, trusting—and you’re still here. That’s not shallow. That’s the deep, enduring faith that God honors.

Now go live it. The world needs your kind of faith.


#signs of deep faith#spiritual growth#faith in daily life#doubting faith#real faith#trusting god#christian faith journey
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