IF I was to pick a time in my life
when life began to take on more meaning and purpose than ever, as I look back,
it would be when I suffered most.
What an irony it
is that a time I most hated in life came to be the most memorable time of my
life. That is because I learned that God was not just what I believed in; God was who
I believed in. Jesus became real for me during that time, for the first time.
At that time Jesus became my Saviour —
by actual experience.
The
way I see it we can grieve well or we can grieve very poorly. If we grieve well
we find that we reach out to God regarding how we truly feel about the
injustice of our losses, and we receive healing even in the instant.
How we
truly feel is about sadness, not anger, not bargaining, not denying; sadness!
Grieving
well means we don’t imagine God doing nothing. He is doing something as he
bears us. As we bellow our prayers of sullen complaint, God is listening. He
feels us. We imagine his intrinsic interest. And we feel his empathy, even as
if we were able to pity ourselves. But God’s care is so much more genuine and
powerful and productive than our own self-pity is. It’s validation that
alleviates grief because it’s been heard. God’s pity is palpable enough to
cause us to melt under the weight of our loss — a healthy and healing melting.
God’s pity is nothing about vengeance, nor is it anything about anyone else.
God meets us where we are at, personally, in how we are feeling within ourselves
at that moment.
Grieving
poorly, on the other hand, might also involve God, but we may not understand
that God is wanting us to go into our core. To grieve poorly is to remain in a
justifiable anger when we could otherwise go into our unparalleled sadness. To
grieve poorly is to work on bargaining with God — “if I do this, God will you
do that?” Grieving poorly is to deny the source of the problem and/or the depth
of what we face.
If we
don’t grieve well we don’t just delay our healing, we prolong and compound our
pain.
It’s
essential to grieve well if we’re to heal appropriately in a reasonable time
frame.
To
grieve well is to suffer in truth with forbearance so as not to take an easier
way out. But the easier ways of denying, staying angry, and bargaining end up
being harder than if we had just knuckled down to our grief work.
The
difference between grieving well and poorly is Jesus. If he is real in our
prayers we imagine him ministering his grace in healing ways. We are getting
better.
Jesus
is faithful in loss, the only helpful companion in grief.
© 2015 Steve Wickham.
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