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Letting Go Of What Was Series
Contributed by Dr. John D. Wentworth on Dec 29, 2025 (message contributor)
Summary: There is a quiet temptation at the turn of every year: to carry forward the weight of what has already been lived. Regrets, disappointments, unresolved griefs, and even past successes can cling to our hearts like heavy luggage. Yet God’s word through Isaiah is clear and co
Title: Letting Go of What Was
Text: “Forget the former things; do not dwell on the past. See, I am doing a new thing!” (Isaiah 43:18–19)
There is a quiet temptation at the turn of every year: to carry forward the weight of what has already been lived. Regrets, disappointments, unresolved griefs, and even past successes can cling to our hearts like heavy luggage. Yet God’s word through Isaiah is clear and co
“You cannot reach the new chapter of your life if your hands are still holding yesterday’s story.” —Anonymous
Isaiah 43 was spoken to a people defined by memory. Israel remembered slavery, exile, failure, and loss. But God did not deny their past; He simply refused to let it define their future. “Forget the former things” is not a call to amnesia—it is an invitation to release the past’s control over the present. God was declaring that what He was about to do would not fit into the old categories of how He had worked before.
I. Here are Four Important Truths Regarding Leaving the Past Behind:
1. We often resist letting go because the past feels familiar, even when it hurts: Pain we know can feel safer than hope we cannot yet see. But God says, “I am doing a new thing—now it springs up; do you not perceive it?” The tragedy is not that God fails to act; it is that we fail to notice because our hands are full of yesterday.
2. Carrying last year’s weight has consequences: It may look like lingering guilt over failures God has already forgiven. It may look like unresolved bitterness that has hardened into habit. Or it may even be nostalgia—holding so tightly to what once was that we miss what God is birthing now. In each case, the weight is the same: it keeps us from moving forward freely.
3. God promises to make “a way in the wilderness and streams in the wasteland.” This is not poetic exaggeration—it is divine assurance. Wildernesses do not disappear overnight, but God creates paths through them. Wastelands do not instantly bloom, but God provides sustaining water along the journey. The future God offers may not be easy, but it is new, guided, and filled with His presence.
4. Letting go is an act of trust. It says, “God, I believe You are bigger than my past and faithful in my future.” It is choosing to walk forward lighter, freer, and more hopeful—not because circumstances have changed, but because God has not.
As you step into what is ahead, hear God’s gentle command: release what was. You are not required to drag yesterday’s burdens into tomorrow. The God who was faithful then is already at work now making a way, doing a new thing, and inviting you to move forward unencumbered.
You don’t have to carry last year’s weight into the next—because God is already there, waiting.
II. Three Ways to Avoid Carrying Last Year’s Pain and Problems into the Next Year
1. Release What God Has Already Forgiven
Many people carry pain that God has already addressed. Guilt, regret, and shame often linger long after repentance has taken place. (Psalm 103:12) says, as far as the east is from the west, so far does he remove our transgressions from us.
2. Refuse to Rehearse Old Wounds
Pain grows when it is constantly replayed. Dwelling on past hurts keeps them alive and shapes how we see the future. Isaiah 43:18 calls us to stop dwelling on former things—not denying them but refusing to let them dominate our thoughts. Healing begins when we intentionally shift our focus from what wounded us to what God is doing now.
3. Entrust the Future to God Daily
Carrying last year’s problems often comes from fear about tomorrow. Jesus reminds us that each day has enough trouble of its own. (Matthew 6:34). Therefore do not be anxious about tomorrow, for tomorrow will be anxious for itself. Sufficient for the day is its own trouble.
Letting go is not forgetting—it is trusting God enough to move forward without dragging yesterday into today.
III. What are three ways of letting go of the past?
Here are three clear, practical ways to let go of the past, rooted in both wisdom and Scripture:
1. Name It and Release It to God
Letting go begins by being honest about what you’re holding onto—hurt, regret, failure, or loss. God invites us to bring those things to Him, not hide them.
“Cast all your anxiety on Him because He cares for you” (1 Peter 5:7).
Prayer is the act of placing the past into God’s hands and trusting Him to carry what you no longer can.
2. Stop Reliving What God Has Already Redeemed
Replaying past mistakes or wounds keeps them alive. While memory may remain, its power does not have to. Scripture reminds us to “forget what lies behind and strain forward to what lies ahead” (Philippians 3:13).
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