| I will never forget the story
of the Pastor who was backing out of his driveway on the way to church
and accidentally ran over - and killed - his three-year-old child.
It was the first time in my
walk that I was confronted with a tragedy that no tidy one-line response
could be anything but an obscene insult.
Do you have an answer as to
why that tragedy happened? If you had been there, you would have no
doubt felt the compulsion to say something to explain it. It is in our
nature, because when life is out of control, fear compels us to somehow
“grab the wheel” - grab the controls of rational explanation.
Job faced far worse. He lost
all his family except his wife. And she was no help! Although, we tend
to criticize her for telling Job to “curse God and die” (she was
wrong) - not considering the agony of a loved one who watches her mate
suffer beyond belief and is helpless to stop it - not considering it was
her children who died too - not considering that her reply was in any
event, more human and more honest than Job's friends.
There is an important modern
life similarity to how we handle extreme tragedy as believers. So many
people in the throes of horrendous anguish of loss and suffering, death
and bereavement, speak out of their rage, their overwhelming hurt, their
sense of violation. “Why did God do this? I HATE Him! I wish I were
dead!” And in rush “Job's friends” to encircle and pontificate
and tell them, “You shouldn't be saying those things! Don't you know
God is a good God?”
Yes, He is - beyond our
wildest dreams - which is why these observing “wise” people aren't
incinerated on the spot for their arrogance in correcting people in
their pain. We deny bleeding hearts permission to feel, to cry, to rage,
to scream, to question why. Unless you have suffered such a loss, you
cannot grasp how it feels - like a helpless butterfly, stuck through the
heart with a pin, your wings of hope ripped off as you agonize in
complete helplessness and terror.
Rather than provide quick,
easy answers to the person's pain-blinded outcries, we would do well to
do what Job's friends did at first: “No one said a word to him, for
they saw that his grief was very great.” (Job 2:13b)
At some point though, they
broke their silence and began an endless series of monologues about why
this happened to Job - and how he should - and shouldn't - respond.
I think I know part of the
reason why they - and we - feel so driven, so compelled to rush in and
fill the void of someone's loss with an endless stream of words.
They - and we - were
terrified. The silence of exquisite, cruel, seemingly meaningless
suffering and loss screams at us: “If it happened to them, a good,
godly person, it can happen to me too!” Suddenly we're faced with the
reality that godliness is not an immunity from suffering - sometimes
incomprehensible suffering.
So we chatter, whistle in
the dark, and send forth unrestrained explanations and “reasons” to
gain rational control of the event - and to distance them from us, and
their suffering as well - (It's because they sinned. They didn't have
enough faith. Surely I'm not like them…) We do it to keep their
devastation away from our safe, non-suffering world, and to avoid the
truth: It COULD be me. It might YET be me.
I came to understand this
after my father died. Mom had died two years before; the loss of my
father was so overwhelming that I thought I would not survive it. Except
for three friends, who did the kindest thing - simply loved and wept
with me - the rest neither sat in silence nor offered words. They just…..vanished.
Hid. Ignored. I wrote about this in my book, “Silence and the Distance
Between Us.” “I know why. I'm your future. I am the ghost of
Christmas future, the Death Mask…They, too, will face this.” Death
comes to everyone, and loss; it is easier to just stay away from those
who have lost loved ones, because it reminds us that we, too, are not
immune.
Some people - a very small
handful, will know a minimal amount of suffering in their lives. Many
more will suffer illness, loss of employment, stray children, death of
parents, a spouse or children, the betrayal of adultery, the agony of
molestation.
Some will suffer so profoundly we can only gasp in horror and rend our
garments.
But, Christian or not,
suffering WILL come. “In the world you will have tribulation. But be
of good cheer. I have overcome the world.” (John 16:33) And if He did,
then so can we. But how? How can we overcome incomprehensible suffering
and tribulation?
One word: Emmanuel.
GOD WITH US.
“Are not two sparrows sold
for a copper coin? And not one of them falls to the ground apart from
the Father's will.” (Mt. 10:29. The most accurate translation of this
says, `NOT ONE OF THEM FALLS WITHOUT THE FATHER.” We have interpreted
this as, “A bird doesn't die without God noticing it.”
God doesn't just “notice.”
“Oh, there goes another bird.” No dispassionate calculation: “One
down, 3 trillion to go…” Not one falls WITHOUT THE FATHER! Oh, how
that speaks to my heart, my deepest pain! It says that Father falls WITH
the sparrow - not observer - but organically, feelingly, painfully
intertwined with the suffering and death of this tiny creature! “Don't
fear; you are of more value than many sparrows!”
If our Creator-Father, who
with one hand strew trillions of stars casually into the cosmos, was so
intimately woven into the suffering, gasping last moments of what most
see as a “scrap bird” - an annoyance - a plain and numerous and
personality-less bird…
…then you must know how
infinitely MORE He feels - knows - experiences - and is intimately ONE
with your own suffering! He is neither dispassionate nor a divine
accountant in your pain, distantly transcribing your every word and
action in your agony. He is EMBRACING you, feeling you, kissing your
tears and knowing your deepest cry.
Do you believe that?
Something happens in those
terrible moments. It is a divine wrestling match, you, screaming to get
away from both the pain and the God you think caused or allowed it…
…and God, squeezing you to
the floor, not letting you go, shouting, “Let me hold you! I know! I
feel ALL that you do! Give me your pain. I will give you…Myself. My
healing. My heart.”
Suffering is a mystery and I
defy anyone to package simple answers for it. But I do know that if
Jesus means anything, He means a God who isn't “God sees us” or “God
notices” but GOD WITH US. Not running from our pain or hiding from it,
not judging, just…THERE. Intimately there in every tear and heart's
cry.
The answers to “why” may
or may not come. The rain falls on the just and the unjust. Some tragedy
is random, senseless and pointless. I do know that in your suffering,
you can know without doubt that “God is at work in ALL things to
produce good.” And your suffering will become the next sufferer's
embrace and kindness of God through human arms. As Amy Carmichael said,
“The end will explain all things.” I believe that. Trust in God's
goodness. Know that He understands the brokenness of your heart and the
often angry and bitter words spoken through grief.
But if you can, in your dark
night of the soul, embrace Emmanuel - “God with you” - in the end,
the need for answers will recede into the real, eternal, unfailing
intimate love of our God who has said, “I am with you always.”
He is present in your pain.
He is with you in your worst
suffering.
He is there to heal even
your deepest hurts.
He is Emmanuel.
By Gregory R Reid
This article posted by permission from the
author: http://www.gregoryreid.com/id93.htm
"O Joy that seekest me thru pain, I
cannot close my heart to Thee; I trace the rainbow thru the rain, and
feel the promise is not vain that morn shall tearless be." ~ Excerpted
from: O Love That Wilt Not Let Me Go, by George Matheson, 1842-1902.
(Matheson was totally blind and described his writing as the "fruit of
much mental suffering.")
Recommended books:
Shade
of His Hand: For the Comfort of the Sorrowing by
Victoria Booth Demarest (she lost two young children) This book is
definitely worth reading. [available in used and out of print]
Death
of a Little Child by
the late J. Vernon McGee (he lost a firstborn baby girl at birth). Order this
booklet for a small fee from
Thru
the Bible Radio Network.
Grief
takes place before healing, but healing occurs in the present because
that's where Jesus is.
~ Anonymous
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It’s
Hard to Get Close to God After Being in Philadelphia Church of God
(also helpful for child survivors of
WCG)
Healing Through Grief (Healing
from grief, trauma and loss; includes personal stories)
Poems/Free
Verse/Comfort in Music (comfort for the brokenhearted;
no audio)
Back to Articles For Those Who Were Emotionally and Spiritually Abused
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