💔 Day 1: He Is Near – Healing from Shame and Brokenness

Week 1: Daily Anchors of Hope

Scripture Focus (RSV):

“The Lord is near to the brokenhearted, and saves the crushed in spirit.” — Psalm 34:18

✨ Devotional Commentary

Shame is quiet, but it’s heavy. It doesn’t always show up in a loud way, it’s the silence after a mistake, the hesitation before prayer, the feeling that you’re not worthy of being loved or forgiven. It’s the voice that says, “You should have known better,” and the weight that makes you feel like you’ll never be whole again.

But Psalm 34:18 tells a different story. It says that God is near—not to the perfect, not to the polished—but to the brokenhearted. To the crushed. To the ones who feel like they’ve failed too many times to be forgiven.

This verse doesn’t offer a quick fix. It offers presence. And sometimes, presence is the most powerful healing of all. God doesn’t wait for us to be whole before He draws near. He steps into the ache, into the mess, and says, I’m here.


đź’­ Personal Reflection

I remember a time in my life when guilt &  shame felt like my shadow. I had made choices I wasn’t proud of—things I never thought I’d do, words I never thought I’d say. And even though I knew God was gracious, I couldn’t shake the feeling that I had disappointed my family, my friends and God beyond repair.

I stopped praying. I stopped showing up to church. I felt like fraud. I’d sit at home feeling guilty knowing people were walking into church with their Bibles and smiles, and I’d think, “They don’t struggle like I do.” I didn’t feel like I belonged anymore.

One night, I opened up Google and searched for scriptures for guilt and shame not because I felt holy, but because I felt desperate.  I landed on Psalm 34:18. I read it slowly, like someone learning to breathe again: “The Lord is near to the brokenhearted, and saves the crushed in spirit.”

I cried. Not the quiet kind of crying, but the kind that comes from deep places. I realized I had been waiting to feel worthy before coming back to God, and all along, He had been waiting for me to simply come.

That verse didn’t erase my shame overnight. But it cracked something open. It reminded me that healing isn’t about pretending you’re okay—it’s about letting God meet you where you’re not.

I started journaling again. I wrote letters to God that were messy and raw. I whispered prayers that felt more like questions. And slowly, I began to believe that maybe—just maybe—God wasn’t repelled by my brokenness. Maybe He was drawn to it.  My family and friends stuck by me like glue, never turning their backs on me, always supportive and understanding.

Today, I still have many scars. But they no longer define me—they remind me. Of where I’ve been. Of who God is. Of how far grace can reach.


đź““ Journaling Prompts

Take time today to sit with these questions:

  • What shame are you still carrying?
  • How has it shaped the way you see yourself—and the way you see God?
  • Write a letter to Jesus expressing your pain and asking Him to draw near.
  • Reflect on a moment when you felt seen by God, even in your brokenness.

📌 Keynote for Daily Living

God doesn’t wait for you to be whole—He meets you in your brokenness.
Let that truth guide your steps today. You are not too far gone. You are not forgotten. You are deeply loved.


🙏 Closing Prayer

Jesus,
I come to You with wounds I’ve tried to hide. I’ve carried shame for too long. But Your Word says You are near to the brokenhearted. So I invite You in. Sit with me in this place. Speak truth over the lies. Heal what I cannot fix.
Amen.

With Love and Grace

Tracey

🌅 Sneak Peek: Day 2 – When You Don’t Know What’s Next

Tomorrow, we’ll explore what it means to trust God in seasons of uncertainty. When the path ahead feels unclear and your heart is tired of waiting, Proverbs 3:5–6 offers a powerful reminder:
“Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not rely on your own insight. In all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make straight your paths.”

We’ll talk about surrendering control, leaning into divine wisdom, and finding peace when the next step isn’t obvious.