Tuesday, July 2, 2019

Do faithful and obedient people suffer?


People have praised my honesty. Honestly yesterday was a terrible day. I was off work to recover from the drive home from Tennessee. For the first time since Joey died, I had worked up the motivation to do some work around the house. I got out the pressure washer which my dad had kindly loaned me. I sprayed for about 20 minutes kicking up caked mud off my driveway and retaining wall. It was okay because i would wash it off once I got all the mud up. The mud did not get washed off before the pressure washer broke. It just fell apart, then I fell apart. 

What caused me to fall apart? I suppose it is being in a fragile place. I tend to get stuck in thought of worthlessness. This time I was stuck on a recent series of Bible studies. A major point of the Bible study that I attended was obedience always leads to blessing. This was preached time and time again across multiple weeks, sometimes with qualifiers and other times without. I could not help but think about how disobedient I must be and how God did not want another disobedient failure like me in the world which is why every son Alice has been pregnant with has died. Four males in utero . Zero live births. My only thought was that God must have been protecting the world from people like me. Obedience always leads to blessing so not being blessed is only logically a failure to be obedient. 

Let me acknowledge that I am not perfect and not completely obedient to God and His word, but who is worthy of the blessing that comes from obedience. I'm pretty sure none of us so I don't get the point of preaching obedience leads to blessing. In fact I think it can be quite harmful. Does God want our obedience? Sure does. Does obedience lead to blessing in many cases? Yes. Does it always coincide? Nope!  If our mere obedience always leads to blessing, then we could control God. He would have no say in the matter.  He would have to bless us.  The caveat may be that Jesus says to love Him is to obey his commands and thus in proclaiming our love for Jesus through obedience we are adopted into a covenant of salvation, then I agree that obedience leads to blessing. However fixating on obedience and blessing beats down those, like me, that are already brokenhearted and grief-stricken in a way Jesus never intended (I am sure the preacher did not intend this either).

My point is not to beat down another preacher. My point is that grief and depression are real. I am not sure which effects me more or that they can truly be separated. All I know is that I'm left a shell of myself more times than anyone will ever know. I fixate on all my shortcomings and hate who I am. 
Now the response of many lovely people is to quote scripture and tell me not to be so hard on yourself. These are truth, but what if sometimes we are not called to a quick fix. What if sometimes it is healthier to sit in the pain? I don't think it is healthy to go there by myself, but one of the things I have appreciated about facebook is hearing how hard my situation is. It is healing for me to know that others think it is hard. I know we are not meant to face this hard world on our own. I need to know that although others do not completely know my pain, at least they see it and say it is okay to hurt. You have given me permission to not feel okay. My greatest comfort is the knowledge that this torture was not a direct result of my failings and whatever my failings are they are covered at the cross. What if Jesus bought me and my babies eternity in heaven and they never have to know any suffering outside the womb? Then this temporary struggle is worth it all. 

2 comments:

Jason Dunn said...

In Jeremiah, the most misused scripture is the "I know the plans I have for you...." scripture. Jeremiah was telling this to a group of people who were unhappy about where they were, and were ready to move on. Jeremiah was telling them it was going to be a while and that they were going to stay in exile--in pain, in suffering under the rule of the Babylonians/Persians. God's plans give us hope and a future. He never says it is going to be easy and pain free. Hope isn't the absence of suffering and pain. The Church sometimes just tells us that if we are suffering, then we are not faithful. We need to pray more, read scripture more, go to church more....but really we should be telling people that they might need to wait, BUT that they won't need to wait alone.

Bill Knechtel said...

Amen and amen. Toss in a good old fashion I can kick this grief's butt becausePhilippians 4:13 tells me all things through Christ. Never suffer when you can do all things through Christ. Pretty sure that is what the imprisoned Paul meant. No suffering.