There are times when I give up;
when I’m overwhelmed mentally, emotionally and spiritually. These are times
when I’m often physically depleted, time poor, and there is a plethora of frustration.
But frustration is merely a symptom.
Exhaustion is more the cause. And discouragement is the effect. It takes me to
the absolute end of myself. It’s a scary place to be.
When I’m beyond discouraged, and
that means I’m actually depressed, even if it’s the accumulation of one day’s
series of hindrances, I’ve found I must remind myself that, “This, too, shall
pass.”
Inevitably, what occurs is there’s 24-hours
of spiritual attack associated with life circumstances I cannot dissociate from,
and then what arrives is a sweet reprieve — where God’s mercies are indeed very
new of the morning! (See Lamentations 3:22-24)
But when I’m discouraged, I’m
unbearable to live with. Any energy I do have I divert into irrationalities of the
diabolical. Sure, I’m a feeler, but when I’m in a good frame of mind, I relate
more as a thinker. But overall, I’m a feeler. I feel my own emotions heavily
and I tend to feel others the same way, perhaps a little less so.
When we’re beyond discouragement, we
must recognise that hope is essential.
To feel at peace again, to exemplify
joy, there must be hope. We turn from the discouraging circumstances through
our imagination to a reality on the horizon. It must be borrowed.
As we turn in, getting a rest from
the exhausting situation we find ourselves in, we face with honesty how we
truly feel. Sometimes we need to sob. We may need to howl. But we wail before
God. We pray in brutal honesty, believing that whatever words come from our
mouth are our therapy before the Lord who already knows.
In praying with tears, with lament
so unbearable we cannot think, we acknowledge before the Lord who already knows
what only the Lord may teach us.
It is a beautiful prayer. Because
it is honest. Contrition is the mode of this kind of prayer, even if we were
angry. And the psalms remind us how important imprecatory prayers are, too.
That is, would you believe, to invoke or call down a curse! Oh, yes, these are
biblical — many from David! Good enough for David… good enough for you and I.
We must recognise the importance in
honesty, in declaration, in contending — for the truth that the Lord already
knows must be faced by ourselves. We must own how we truly feel.
When we’re discouraged, we need to
recognise we’re in fine company.
Of course, we feel most alone when
we’re most discouraged. The truth is we don’t know just how many people around us
are feeling the same way. The trouble is, in this day as much as ever, we tend
to value denial more than honesty. When we feel alone in our discouragement, we
tend not to see others in their discouragement.
God loves it when we face the truth
in the counsel of friends, for even in our discouragement we are an
encouragement to others who are discouraged — if we have the courage to be
real.
When we’re beyond discouraged, we’re
gently being led to release our grip on what we cannot control.
Letting go can seem impossible, but
it is what we need to do.
Most importantly, we need to
remember we’re not alone.
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