لۆگۆی یوڤێرژن
ئایکۆنی گەڕان

Hope for the Hurting: For the Hurting: Encouragement for Suffering Seasonsنموونە

Hope for the Hurting: For the Hurting: Encouragement for Suffering Seasons

ڕۆژی12 لە 15

Jesus told us to expect difficulties. This often brings to mind external problems like storms, wars, persecution, and sickness. While Jesus forewarned us of each of those things, the word our Bibles translate as trouble or tribulation refers to the internal pressure that comes when one feels trapped, without options and means of escape.

He knew His disciples would soon feel overwhelmed, yet still He told them, more than once, not to be afraid. His statements didn’t convey condemnation. He issued an invitation to seek Him and His strength.

“Do not let your hearts be troubled,” He said, as if He knew this would require a fight, later adding, “take courage.” In the original Greek, He’s encouraging us to strengthen ourselves from within, or more accurately, to allow God to strengthen us.

That’s how we battle our fears and weather hardship well: by trusting in and relying on Christ. As we intentionally reflect on who He is, what He’s done, and all He’s promised and evaluate our fears in light of all we know is true, our faith grows.

Life will feel hard and frightening at times. Jesus didn’t deny that, nor did He chastise His disciples for the intense emotions they’d soon experience. Instead, He acknowledged and validated them. But then He spoke His truth, peace, and love into them.

He invited them to let their fears drive them deeper in their relationship with Him. That was how they’d “take heart” or “have courage”, as some translations phrase it.

And in this, we see His tender heart to comfort and encourage us. To love us, because He knows it’s His love, not His anger or judgment, that has the power to cast out our fear and comfort our overwhelmed and hurting hearts.

~Warmly, Jennifer Slattery

کتێبی پیرۆز

دەربارەی ئەم پلانە

Hope for the Hurting: For the Hurting: Encouragement for Suffering Seasons

When we are hurting or going through a difficult season, we might feel alone and abandoned. It might feel as if God isn't listening to our cries for help or that He doesn't care about our pain. Yet, throughout Scripture God communicates that He is with us, sees us, loves us deeply, empathizes with our pain, and still has good plans for us. He invites us to draw close to Him in times of hardship, receive His comfort, and hold tight to His unchanging truth.

More