Throughout this series on attachment, we’ve explored how our earliest relationships shape the way we connect with others. We’ve looked at secure, anxious, avoidant, and disorganized attachment styles and how these patterns continue to influence our relationships well into adulthood. But attachment doesn’t stop with human relationships.

The ways we learned to experience love, safety, comfort, and connection often shape how we experience God as well. For many of us, our image of God is not formed solely by theology. It is formed through experience.
Long before we can understand concepts like grace, faithfulness, or unconditional love, we are learning what relationships feel like. We learn whether people are dependable. Whether our needs matter. Whether comfort is available when we are hurting. These experiences become the lens through which we often view God.
The Attachment We Carry Toward God
One of the most profound realizations in attachment work is that the attachment patterns we carry toward our caregivers often become the attachment patterns we carry toward God.
If love felt consistent and available, trusting God’s presence may feel more natural.
If love felt unpredictable, we may find ourselves constantly wondering if God is disappointed in us, distant from us, or withdrawing from us.
If emotional needs were dismissed, we may struggle to believe God truly cares about our pain.

If closeness felt unsafe, intimacy with God may feel uncomfortable, even when it is deeply desired.
This does not mean our parents become God. Nor does it mean our experiences determine spiritual truth. It simply means that our nervous systems often interpret God through the relational templates we learned early in life.
When Theology and Experience Don’t Match
Many Christians intellectually believe that God is loving. Yet emotionally, they may struggle to feel loved.
Many believe God is present. Yet feel abandoned when life becomes difficult.
Many believe God forgives. Yet continue living under shame.
This disconnect can be confusing. Often, it is not a lack of faith. It is an attachment wound. The mind may know one thing while the nervous system expects something entirely different. Our bodies tend to trust what they have repeatedly experienced.
Why Healing Matters
Spiritual growth is not simply learning new information about God. It is allowing our lived experience to catch up with what we believe. As healing takes place, we begin to notice old narratives that may have shaped our relationship with God:
- God is disappointed in me.
- I have to earn God’s love.
- God only shows up when I get everything right.
- If I struggle, God will leave me.
- My needs are too much.

These beliefs often sound spiritual on the surface, but many originate in human relationships rather than God’s character. Healing invites us to gently examine where these stories came from.
A Gentle Reflection
Spend some time with these questions:
- When I think of God, what emotions immediately arise?
- Do I see God as close, distant, loving, disappointed, unpredictable, or safe?
- What experiences in my childhood may have contributed to that image?
- What parts of my story still need compassion and attention?
There are no right answers. The goal is not judgment. The goal is awareness.
Next Week
In the next post, we’ll explore the wounds beneath our attachment patterns and how unhealed experiences continue shaping both our relationships and our spiritual lives. We’ll begin identifying the stories we carry, and the stories God may be inviting us to release.







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