How to Return to God After Backsliding: Biblical Steps That Actually Work

How to Return to God After Backsliding (Biblical Steps That Actually Work) | Hosea 6:1 & Joel 2:12
40 Days of Prayer · Week 1: Repentance & Cleansing · Day 1

How to Return to God After Backsliding: Biblical Steps That Actually Work

“Come, and let us return to the Lord; for He has torn, but He will heal us; He has stricken, but He will bind us up.”
— Hosea 6:1

📅 Published April 23, 2026 ✍ Sanmi Dawodu Ministries 📖 Hosea 6:1

How do you return to God after backsliding?

To return to God after backsliding, you must:

  • Acknowledge your spiritual distance honestly
  • Confess your sins specifically — not vaguely
  • Turn back to God with your whole heart
  • Take immediate action toward Him — prayer, Scripture, fellowship
  • Receive His forgiveness and restoration by grace, not by earning it

Key Scripture: Joel 2:12“Turn to Me with all your heart, with fasting, with weeping, and with mourning.”

“Come, and let us return to the Lord; for He has torn, but He will heal us; He has stricken, but He will bind us up.”

Hosea 6:1 (NKJV)

“'Now, therefore,' says the Lord, 'Turn to Me with all your heart, with fasting, with weeping, and with mourning.'”

Joel 2:12 (NKJV)

A Word from Sanmi Dawodu to the Drifting Heart

If you're searching for how to return to God after backsliding, you're not alone. Many believers go through seasons of spiritual drift — but the Bible gives a clear path back to God, no matter how far you feel you have gone.

Every spiritual journey begins — or restarts — at the same place: the Father's door. Whether you have walked with God for decades or have never seriously walked with Him at all, the first question Scripture asks is the same question God asked Adam in Genesis 3:9: “Where are you?” Today, I want to walk with you through the Biblical path of return. Not religious performance. Not guilt-driven reform. A genuine, Spirit-led return to the God who has been watching the road for you.

The Hebrew word used throughout the prophets for ‘return' is shuv — to turn around, to change direction, to come back. It is the same root behind the concept of repentance. Before any believer can pray powerfully, intercede effectively, or walk in Kingdom authority, we must first answer God's call to return. This is not about what you have done wrong — it is about where you have drifted. And today, the distance ends.

How to Come Back to God After Falling Away

If you feel like you have gone too far from God, the Bible makes it clear — you can come back. No matter how long you have drifted, no matter how deep the backsliding has gone, God's invitation still stands: “Return to Me with all your heart” (Joel 2:12).

Coming back to God after falling away is not about climbing a ladder of religious performance. It is about turning toward the Father who is already running toward you. Backsliding never puts you beyond His reach — only beyond your own comfort. The very fact that you are reading this is evidence that the Holy Spirit is already drawing you back.

What Does It Mean to Return to God Biblically?

To return to God biblically is to respond to His own invitation — an invitation that runs through the entire Bible. Hosea 6:1 declares, “Come, and let us return to the Lord; for He has torn, but He will heal us.” Joel 2:12 adds, “Turn to Me with all your heart.” And Jesus painted the fullest portrait of return in the parable of the prodigal son (Luke 15:11-32).

Biblical return has three essential dimensions:

  • Heart return — an inward change of direction, away from self and toward God
  • Verbal return — honest confession, specifically naming what has created the distance
  • Active return — movement that matches the confession: rising up and walking home

How We Drift from God: The Anatomy of Spiritual Drift

Israel's pattern in the Old Testament is the universal pattern of the human heart. Deuteronomy 8 describes it with sobering precision: God blesses His people, His people become prosperous, their hearts become full, and they forget the Lord their God. Drift rarely begins with rebellion. It begins with fullness — with comfort, with achievement, with the subtle intoxication of a life that no longer feels desperate.

Jesus told the story of the prodigal son not as an exotic tale of exceptional wickedness but as a portrait of the ordinary human journey. The son did not leave because he hated his father. He left because he wanted more than the father's house could offer — or so he believed. He wanted independence. And his journey away from home is the journey every human heart makes when it decides it can manage without God.

“But when he came to himself, he said, ‘How many of my father's hired servants have bread enough and to spare, and I am perishing with hunger!'”

Luke 15:17 (NKJV)

The turning point in the prodigal's story is three words: “He came to himself.” The return to God always begins with a return to reality — the honest acknowledgment that the far country has nothing that satisfies.

What Happens When You Drift Away from God: The Hidden Cost of Backsliding

Spiritual drift is never free. The prodigal “wasted his possessions with prodigal living” (Luke 15:13). Consider what we lose in the far country:

Peace

We were designed for the peace of God that passes understanding — the shalom that can only be found in proximity to God. Distance from Him produces anxiety, restlessness, and a low-grade spiritual unease that no earthly remedy can cure.

Power

The anointing of the Holy Spirit diminishes in a life lived at a distance from its Source. Samson is the tragic portrait of a man who did not know that the Spirit had departed from him — still going through the motions of ministry while empty of the presence that made it powerful.

Purpose

Psalm 32:8 says, “I will instruct you and teach you in the way you should go.” Divine direction requires divine proximity. Drift from God is always drift from destiny.

Joy

David, after his sin with Bathsheba, did not pray “restore my ministry” or “restore my throne.” He prayed, “Restore to me the joy of Your salvation” (Psalm 51:12). Joy — the deepest, most resilient joy — is the exclusive property of those who live near God.

The Father Who Runs Toward You: Luke 15 Explained

One of the most extraordinary portraits of God in all of Scripture is the image of the running Father in Luke 15:20: “And he arose and came to his father. But when he was still a great way off, his father saw him and had compassion, and ran and fell on his neck and kissed him.”

In first-century Middle Eastern culture, it was considered undignified for a patriarch to run. It was a public act of humiliation. Yet this father — who is unmistakably God in Jesus's parable — saw his son while he was still a great way off, and ran.

God is not waiting for you to clean yourself up before coming home. He is not standing at the door with a list of conditions. He is on the road, looking for you, running toward you. The robe, the ring, the sandals, the feast — these are all His initiatives, not the son's achievements. This is the Gospel.

“The Lord has appeared of old to me, saying: ‘Yes, I have loved you with an everlasting love; therefore with lovingkindness I have drawn you.'”

Jeremiah 31:3 (NKJV)

How to Return to God: 7 Practical Biblical Steps

Returning to God is not complicated — but it is costly. Here is the path, drawn directly from Scripture:

Step 1: Acknowledge the Distance Honestly

Stop minimizing the gap. The prodigal did not say “I've just been busy.” He said: “I have sinned against heaven and before you, and I am no more worthy to be called your son” (Luke 15:21). Honest acknowledgment is the first step back.

Step 2: Make the Decision and Move

“He arose and came to his father.” He did not wait until he felt more ready. Return begins with a decision expressed through physical, actual movement — toward prayer, toward Scripture, toward church, toward confession.

Step 3: Receive, Do Not Earn

The prodigal intended to negotiate his way back into the household at a lesser level. But the Father would not hear it. Grace does not rehire the prodigal — it reinstates him as a son. You cannot earn your way back. You can only receive your way back. If you struggle to believe God's forgiveness can actually reach you, continue into Day 2: How to Receive God's Forgiveness Completely — the next step after you have returned is learning how to fully receive what He has already given.

Step 4: Confess Specifically

Vague repentance produces vague restoration. Name what has been happening. Proverbs 28:13: “He who covers his sins will not prosper, but whoever confesses and forsakes them will have mercy.” Be specific, honest, and unflinching.

Step 5: Receive the Father's Welcome

The robe, the ring, the sandals — receive them. Refuse the false humility that says, “I'm not worthy.” Of course you are not worthy. Neither was the prodigal. Worthiness was never the qualification. Return was.

Step 6: Restore Spiritual Disciplines

Re-establish the practices that close distance: daily Scripture reading, consistent prayer, worship, fellowship with Spirit-led believers. These are not legalism — they are the rhythms of relationship.

Step 7: Guard Against Future Drift

The prodigal's return is famous. His re-drifting, if any, is not recorded. Take seriously what caused the first drift and place spiritual safeguards — accountability, community, ongoing confession — around those vulnerabilities. One of the strongest safeguards available to any believer is consistent, Spirit-led prayer. If you want to build a prayer life that guards against future backsliding, join the 40 Days & 40 Nights of Prayer series — a daily framework of sermon packs, prayer points, and devotionals designed to keep your heart close to God long after Day 1.

“‘Come now, and let us reason together,' says the Lord. ‘Though your sins are like scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though they are red like crimson, they shall be as wool.'”

Isaiah 1:18 (NKJV)

Altar Call: Come Home Today

Today is Day One of a new season. The first step of this journey is the most important step of all: returning to God with your whole heart. Not your church attendance. Not your reputation. Not the public version of yourself. You — your real self, your honest heart, your unedited life — coming home to the Father who has been watching the road for you.

You may have been in church your whole life and still be living in the far country of religious routine without genuine intimacy with God. You may have drifted so gradually that you barely noticed the distance. Today is the day the distance ends.

If guilt or condemnation is whispering that it is too late, that you have gone too far, or that God cannot possibly take you back — do not listen to that voice. Read this guide next on how to overcome guilt and condemnation and walk in the freedom of Romans 8:1. Guilt is not the Father's posture toward the returning son. Celebration is.

Bow your heart right now and simply say: “Father, I am coming home.”

A Prayer to Return to God

Father, I confess that I have drifted from You. I acknowledge the distance between where I am and where I should be in my walk with You. I am not coming with excuses or justifications. I come with honesty: I have been in the far country, and today I am coming home.

Give me a genuinely repentant heart. Rend my heart, not just my garments. I choose to receive Your welcome rather than negotiate my position in Your house. I am not a hired servant — I am a son, a daughter, an heir.

Seal this return with the fire of Your Holy Spirit. Let this be a new chapter. In Jesus' name, Amen.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does it mean to return to God in the Bible?

In the Bible, returning to God is more than a feeling of remorse — it is a deliberate change of direction. The Hebrew word shuv, used throughout the prophets and in Hosea 6:1, means to turn around and come back. To return to God is to leave the ‘far country' of drift and move — in heart, in confession, and in action — back to the Father.

How do I know if I have drifted away from God?

Common signs of drifting away from God include a prayer life that has grown quiet, a Bible that gathers dust, worship that has become routine, lingering unconfessed sin, or a heart that no longer feels desperate for His presence. If these are present, Revelation 2:4-5 offers the remedy: remember where you fell, repent, and do the first works.

Can God take me back after I have walked away for years?

Yes. Hosea 14:4 declares, ‘I will heal their backsliding, I will love them freely.' The parable of the prodigal son in Luke 15:11-32 shows a father who sees his son while he is ‘yet a great way off' — and runs. No matter how long you have been away, God's door is still open.

What is the difference between backsliding and losing salvation?

Backsliding describes a believer who has drifted into sin or spiritual dryness without genuine repentance. It is serious but not necessarily final. Scripture (1 John 1:9, Romans 8:38-39) emphasizes that God's love and the blood of Jesus are sufficient to restore the returning believer. Always take backsliding seriously, but never as hopeless.

What is the first step to return to God today?

The first step is honest acknowledgment. Like the prodigal in Luke 15:21, say, ‘I have sinned against heaven and before You.' Then pray: ‘Father, I am coming home.' This single moment of surrender opens the door for the Holy Spirit to begin a full work of restoration in your life.

Your return to God starts now. Don't wait for a better moment — this is the moment.

Continue the 40-Day Journey

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