You Can Shipwreck Your Faith by Forgetting Your Prophecies
And it happens far far too often
It doesn’t happen in an instant.
Most of the time, it happens quietly. You get busy. You get tired. You stop telling the story of what God has promised you.
Days turn into years. Hope feels like something you used to carry.
And the words God spoke over your life—words that once felt electric—start to fade into the background.
This is why Paul urged Timothy to hold on tight to what had been spoken over him:
This charge I entrust to you, Timothy, my child, in accordance with the prophecies previously made about you, that by them you may wage the good warfare, holding faith and a good conscience. By rejecting this, some have made shipwreck of their faith.
(1 Timothy 1:18–19)
Notice the order:
First, you remember the prophecies.
Then, you wage your battles with them.
God’s promises over your life are not decorations.
They are weapons.
They are anchors.
They are reminders that you are part of a bigger story.
The Power of Remembering
When you stop rehearsing what God has spoken, it’s easy to feel untethered.
You start to question whether you ever really heard Him at all.
But this isn’t the end of the story.
Remembering is not just looking back.
It’s how you stay connected to the future God has prepared for you.
This is why Scripture is full of calls to remember:
Remember the wonders He has done.
Remember His faithfulness.
Remember the words He spoke.
Remembering fuels faith.
It steadies you when life feels uncertain.
It renews courage when the path gets long.
If You Feel Adrift
If you feel like you’ve lost sight of what God has promised, you’re not alone.
Everyone faces seasons when the horizon blurs.
But God is not pacing the shoreline, wondering if you’ll find your way back.
He is already near.
He still holds the map.
The promises are still alive because He is.
You don’t have to work yourself up to believe again.
You just have to remember.
Remember what He has said.
Remember what He has done.
Remember who you are.
This is how you keep going—not with hype, but with history.
Not with noise, but with promises that never fail.
You can shipwreck your faith by forgetting your prophecies.
But you can recover your faith by remembering them.
We are building the doxa app to actively remember what God has said and done, to fight, and win, the good fight.


