Choosing GratitudeSample
Day 3: In Pain
"Suffering is unbearable if you aren’t certain that God is for you and with you....suffering is actually at the heart of the Christian story."
— Tim Keller, Walking with God through Pain and Suffering
Somewhere along the way, we may have heard that pain is a helpful resource to us. It tells us something is off. Something must stop. Something is dead wrong.
But what does it mean to practice gratitude in pain? Pain is a teacher, if we let her in. And like all good teachers, we often hunt them down, many years later, and say: Thank you. You pushed, you prodded, you poked...and now look at me. Because of you, I am who I am.
God is no stranger to pain and struggle. The big, grand meta-narrative of God’s very own story is that His Son was betrayed by his best friends and then whipped, beaten, scourged, shredded and nailed to a tree. This is after bearing the news of his dear cousin's beheading. After he was face to face with disease and demons. After he saw the wreckage of what sin has done to our earth.
There is so much suffering, pain, death.
And I am asking you to be thankful in these?
What I am asking is that we would, for just a moment, be willing to consider that beauty can come out of ashes. That babies come after the bearing down...after the near-death of painful-birth.
That unless a seed dies, it cannot bear fruit.
That Sunday came after that treacherous Friday.
And that after winter is spring. Every. Single. Amazing. Time.
And this, unfortunately, is how our busted-up world works. We cannot have one without the other. Pain and joy are tethered on earth; we can be bitter about it or we can better from it.
And, dear one, I don't say this flippantly or callously as if I don't know pain. I say it delicately, with an extended hand of grace.
I have seen cancer take lives. I have wept on bathroom floors with too-young widows. I have shaken fists at infertility for years in my life. I have cried in hospital hallways after we were told my son has Crohn's disease. I have grieved for lost husbands, lost babies, lost innocence, lost jobs, lost hopes, and lost dreams.
And not to mention the variety-pack of struggles we all walk through here on earth. Struggles against anxiety, against decisions, and against insecurities, to name a few.
So what can we say about gratitude in pain and struggle? We can be grateful for these 3 truths:
God is WITH us in our struggles. (Matthew 28:20)
God is FOR us when it seems all else is against us. (Romans 8:31)
God will carry us THROUGH our pain. (Isaiah 43:1-3)
My King knows pain and my King knows me and my King is here. I am grateful for that. He sees each tear, knows each tear, bottles each tear. What an affectionate, sweet truth. He never tires of our tears and He sits with us in our struggle.
God, thank you that you are with us in struggle. You are with us in what is painful and sad and terrifying and real. Thank you for not being far away, unavailable or shaming about our pain, our struggle, our weakness, our insecurity. Thank you for knowing pain, choosing to walk through it (and not under or around it) and for showing us a way about pain that we need to learn. Thank you for being FOR us; if you made us then you are for us. If you came to earth to be with us, then you are for us. Help us, God, in our struggle and in our pain.
About this Plan
So many of us are living frustrated, anxious, and overwhelmed. But we don't have to stay this way. New habits can be formed. Fresh hope can be found. Joy is truly right around the corner. But how do we get there? The spiritual practice of gratitude is often the missing key to unlock the hope, joy, and beauty around us.
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We would like to thank Amy Seiffert for providing this plan. For more information, please visit: http://www.amyseiffert.com/