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"There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus. For the law of the Spirit of life has set you free in Christ Jesus from the law of sin and death." — Romans 8:1-2
If you’ve been struggling with chronic symptoms like persistent fatigue, "brain fog," or sudden food sensitivities, you might be surprised to learn that the culprit isn’t just physical. Often, these symptoms are tied to an emotional weight you’ve been carrying from your past. As Christians, we know God is a God of grace, yet so many of us are subconsciously stuck in unhealthy thinking patterns, reliving mistakes that God has already wiped clean.
As believers, we know intellectually that God is a God of grace. Yet, many of us live as though our past mistakes are still on His active record. If you frequently feel "stuck" in guilt, you aren’t just carrying an emotional burden; as Brooklyn Hanna explains in the video below, you are triggering a destructive physical stress response that keeps you trapped in chronic symptoms.
Persistent guilt is rarely a divine conviction; more often, it is a deceptive tactic designed to keep your nervous system in a state of "high alert."
When you ruminate on the past, your brain doesn't realize the event is over. It perceives a "threat" in the present moment. This triggers the limbic system, the part of your brain responsible for survival. When this system is activated by shame, it floods your body with cortisol and adrenaline.
Brooklyn Hannah highlights that this constant negative emotion doesn’t just weigh on your mind as it heightens your physical stress response, making chronic symptoms like fatigue, brain fog, and food sensitivities even worse. It is all connected. By replaying past trials, you signal to your body that you are in danger, preventing it from entering the "rest and repair" state it needs to heal.
To break free, we must recognize where these "guilt loops" come from. Jesus calls the enemy the "father of lies" (John 8:44). The enemy loves to whisper that you aren't good enough, that you’ve messed up too many times, or that your specific sin is too big for God’s grace.
But look at the truth of Scripture:
1 John 1:9: If we confess, He is faithful and just cleanses us from all unrighteousness.
Psalm 103:12: As far as the east is from the west, so far has He removed our transgressions from us.
Think about that: East and west never meet. They are infinite directions. If God has moved on from your past and removed your sin that far away, why are you still holding onto it? God is a God of new beginnings; every day is a fresh start, not a continuation of yesterday’s failures.
It is helpful to distinguish between the "helper" and the "hurter."
This is a healthy, brief response to wrongdoing. It leads us to our knees in repentance and brings us back to Scripture. It is a sign that God is at work in us, showing us our need for Him.
This is an unhealthy thought pattern that "eats us alive." It is a type of self-penitence where we try to pay for our sins through our own misery. As the curated sources suggest, we often believe that if we make ourselves miserable enough, the sin will be more "forgivable."
The Truth: Beating yourself up doesn't glorify God; it tarnishes the truth of Christ’s sacrifice. There is no extra punishment needed from you: Christ took it all.
Knowing the truth is the first step, but "rewiring" your brain requires active disruption of negative patterns. Brooklyn Hannah suggests three powerful tools to stop guilt from cycling through your mind and harming your health:
You must recognize and interrupt the thought. When you notice guilt creeping in or you begin replaying a "past trial," do not accept it as truth.
As soon as the thought hits, say to yourself: "This is just guilt; I don’t need to carry it." Stop the "movie" of the past from playing. Bring your focus back to the present moment.
You cannot just "stop" thinking about something; you must replace the thought. Immediately go to the Word of God.
Speak truth over yourself. Recite Hebrews 8:12: "For I will be merciful toward their iniquities, and I will remember their sins no more." Repeat this until the guilty thought fades. By doing this, you are physically changing the neural pathways in your brain.
Sometimes guilt feels "sticky," like it’s hard to let go. This is when you must invite God into the heart of the emotion.
Use a simple prayer of release: "Lord, I give this guilt to You. I trust that I am forgiven. I refuse to carry the weight of my past. Thank You for Your love and grace."
One of the hardest steps is often forgiving ourselves. While the Bible focuses on receiving God's forgiveness, it also commands us in Colossians 3:13 to "Forgive as the Lord forgave you." If the Creator of the Universe, the Perfect Judge, has looked at your record and declared it "Clean," who are you to overrule Him? When you refuse to forgive yourself, you are essentially acting as your own judge and declaring that Christ’s sacrifice wasn’t quite enough for your specific mistake.
Letting go of guilt is an act of faith. It is a declaration that God’s grace is bigger than your biggest failure.
If anyone had a reason to be paralyzed by guilt, it was the Apostle Paul. He participated in the "heinous" persecution of the early church. Yet, when he "saw the light," he didn't wallow in self-pity. He didn't let his "material record" hinder his work.
Paul understood that "human history needs to be revised" by the Christ-idea. He focused on his new, God-impelled calling. If Paul had spent his days ruminating on his past sins, he never would have had the "zeal" and "longing" to spread the Gospel across the world. Like Paul, once true reformation takes hold in your heart, you must move forward. As Mary Baker Eddy wrote, "Where the motive to do right exists... we should avoid referring to past mistakes."
By releasing guilt, you aren't just improving your spiritual life; you are setting the stage for physical healing. Imagine how freeing it will be to no longer carry that weight! Your stress levels will lower, your immune system can function properly, and the "brain fog" of shame can finally lift.
Jeremiah 29:11 reminds us: "For I know the plans I have for you... plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future." You are not your past mistakes. You are who God says you are: Loved. Forgiven. Set Free.
Negative thinking keeps you stuck in a chronic stress response, but every day is a fresh opportunity to rewire. This week, when guilt comes knocking, don't let it in for a 20-minute conversation. Recognize it, replace it with a promise from God, and release it in prayer.
D’Entremont, L. (2025, March 12). A biblical approach to an overly guilty conscience. Beautiful Christian Life.
Raffles, M. (2022, September 1). Guilt overcome. The Christian Science Journal.
Pedersen, T. (2024, May 29). Overcoming the challenge of religious guilt. Psych Central.
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