Hannah: Trusting God With Your Problemsনমুনা
Hannah was not understood by her loving husband
Hannah was upset by Peninnah’s meanness and her own hopeless situation. She wept and would not eat. Her husband tried his best to express his love for her, but he did not understand her pain. He asked her, “Why is your heart sad? Am I not more to you than ten sons?” This question makes it clear that he did not understand his wife’s feelings at all.
When we feel sad, it often helps to have the sympathy of others. It helps to talk with someone who has gone through the same thing or who just listens attentively. But if people around us show over and over again that they don’t understand us, or if they come up with solutions that don’t hit the core of our problem, this only increases our loneliness and frustration. Although their words are well-meant, they don’t help.
The book of Job tells us that Job had the same experience with his friends. Utterly frustrated, he exclaimed: “You are like worthless doctors who cannot heal anyone. I wish you would just be quiet. That would be the wisest thing you could do” (Job 13:4-5, ERV).
How about you? Do you feel like your friends and family members understand you? How do you react if they completely miss the point?
Scripture
About this Plan
The book of First Samuel records the story of Hannah, an Israelite woman. Her life circumstances were humiliating and demoralizing. But the Bible pictures her as an exemplary, God-fearing woman. This reading plan takes Hannah’s life story as an example for our own lives. Do read with us!
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