Page 121 - Biblical Counseling II-Textbook
P. 121

“Spiritual Responses
               We all long for peace and joy.  We don’t like difficulty, tension, or sadness.  We love the Resurrection,
               but we don’t like to linger too long on Good Friday.  The trouble is, suffering is a real part of the broken
               world we live in. The 23rd Psalm with its green pastures and quiet waters follows the 22nd, which
               begins, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?  Why are you so far from saving me, so far from
               my cries of anguish?” And yet, how do we fully understand the real meaning and joy of Resurrection
               Sunday without fully understanding the weight, the suffering, and the grief of Good Friday?  Scripture,
               particularly the Old Testament, is full of stories of trauma.  We don’t tend to dwell on those.  We prefer
               the verses that make us feel calm and happy.  However, we can learn key lessons about facing our
               trauma and the anxiety that it causes from these stories.

               Facing Trauma requires honesty about our pain.
               I wish that just reciting a passage of Scripture was all you needed to do to heal from the trauma behind
               it, but God’s Word is not intended to be our Zoloft (Zoloft is a medication that helps with depression and
               anxiety).  It must be understood in its full, overarching narrative.  The stories in the Old Testament often
               detail painful circumstances, unimaginable injustice, and uncertain futures.  They also picture a
               relentless God who pursues and intervenes for good, even when the circumstances seem hopeless or
               dire.  Our own stories are much the same.


               Part of healing from our trauma is to stop hiding from our reality and attempting to paint a happy face
               on it.  Instead, we must confess it, allow it to come into the light, and lament it.  Biblically, this was done
               well.  Lamentations illustrates how we can grieve deeply about our sin through the story of the
               subsequent captivity of the nation of Israel.  Job expresses despair as he wrestles with devastating loss
               despite his upstanding lifestyle.  One of the reasons that so many details are given through the Old
               Testament is so we can rest assured that God cares about the truth of our details.  We can bring our
               pain into the light, because only then can it be dealt with properly.

               Facing Trauma requires Grief over the loss
               Consider the rape of Tamar by her brother, Amnon.  “She put ashes on her head and tore the ornate
               robe she was wearing.  She put her hands on her head and went away, weeping aloud as she
               went…  And Tamar lived in her brother Absalom’s house, a desolate woman.” (2 Sam. 13:19, 20b)
               Absalom was so angry at the injustice done to his sister he later had Amnon killed.  David believed all his
               sons had been killed, and he “tore his clothes and lay on the ground.” Later, when the other sons
               arrived, they were “wailing loudly.  The king too and all his servants wept bitterly.”  And “King David
               mourned many days for his son.”

               Place this story in modern time.  What would Tamar likely have done?  Perhaps been too ashamed to act
               like anything was wrong.  Tried to go on with life and stuff down how she felt.  Worried that people
               might accuse her of coming on to Amnon. And would we ever see grown men grieving so deeply they
               laid on the floor or tore their clothes or wailed loudly together?

               I love the Psalms because we see that David doesn’t just sing songs that make him feel happy.  He
               expresses his anger, his frustration, his confusion, his sadness, his weakness, and then he engages with
               who God is in the midst of that grief.  He doesn’t stay wallowing in his mess, but neither does he ignore
               it.







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