Friday, February 27, 2015

When You Want to Commit Suicide



When You Want to Commit Suicide
What happens when a Christian wants to die? What are the thoughts that lead to such a conclusion? I struggle on almost a daily basis with pain – sometimes it’s debilitating, and it’s been that way for years. The pain is related to several neurological disorders.  Lately it’s been compounded by the deaths of my parents who were my rocks – interesting isn’t it? That I would ascribe to them a name that God has reserved for Himself.  They were there in the sense that they understood – they knew me from birth and had a firm grip (as well as anyone) on my pain and illness, and now they’re gone.  
There have been times that I have grappled with the desire to go on because life was too painful – physically, emotionally and spiritually.  This chronic pain for a number of years is grating on my emotions and ability to think.  Many days my mental effectiveness is diminished.  Lately it seems that there have been increasing physical limitations and debilitations.  The emotional aspects relating to loss of mobility and the loss of various family members, downsizing and relocating have led to the buying into misbeliefs and outright lies. Finally in the milieu of the stated events the Enemy of our souls moved in announcing God’s anger at real and perceived sins or mistakes. The result was fear, despair and deep desire to find a way out of this life.   In the deepest corner of my heart I have had a long standing fear that one day the pain would overwhelm me and I really would seek a way out.
Over the past several months, I have received the news of the deaths of childhood and high school friends. One friend chose to end her life by using firearms. She had previously posted desperately sad and seemingly somewhat angry messages through social media. I read some of her messages, noted her despair and attempted to contact her, but to no avail. Then the unthinkable occurred in her life; I received word of her passing at her own hand through this most violent means.  And we were left to process the why’s, to process the pain and to hold each other tightly, emotionally speaking.  Another high school classmate died of a debilitating neurological disease several weeks later.  Now in recent days a lady I don’t even know took her struggle with life to social media – she was suffering from a brain tumor and chose to end her life on a specified day to avoid the pain that would accompany the closing days of her life.  Then I began to think dark and harmful thoughts . . . “what if . . .?”
As I considered these events and the desires that sometimes plague me,  I had a conversation with a trusted Christian  which revealed  the evil in my heart that emanated from the desire to take my own life to end the emotional  and physical pain. He told me that were such an event to occur in my life it would be no accident, but rather the result of a sinful choice. That was a rather frightening look at the depth to which my sinful heart could sink in the face of personal struggles and fear. I believe God’s word has the answer to for the Christian who is in so much pain he or she despairs of life.  It is found in Lamentations 3:21-25.   According to some conservative scholars, in the immediate context, Jerusalem lay in ruins, the temple was destroyed, the Jews were in exile and life, as they had known it for many years, was over.   Then Jeremiah, the weeping prophet, moves in with his message of hope, tucked away in this small Old Testament book.
In the current scheme of things, life happens; illness occurs; our strength is sapped and our dreams lie dead in the dust, and so we enter into the exile of life’s events.  Sometimes people feel as though their bodies and hearts have been ravaged by pain in much the same way Jerusalem was ravaged by the Babylonians and they have been forced into some form of exile.   It seems though in both instances exiles ask the same questions ---“Where is God?”   “WHERE is God?”  “Where IS God?” “Where is GOD? How can I find His purpose amidst the rubble of my life?  Jeremiah, looking at the waste land that used to be his beloved home and his beloved temple, penned the following as he desperately tried to bolster his own flagging courage and the courage of his fellow compatriot exiles.  The same message can be spoken to those who so desperately seek hope in the midst of their pain
                                                21 But this I call to mind,
                                                and therefore I have hope:
                                               22 The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases;
                                               his mercies never come to an end;
                                                23 they are new every morning;
                                               great is your faithfulness.
                                               24 “The Lord is my portion,” says my soul,
                                               “therefore I will hope in him.”[1]         
Jeremiah’s words have great wisdom for the Christian struggling with despair[2].  He says that there is hope in knowing certain facts.  He says that God’s mercy – His unfailing, faithful love never ends – it’s always there.  Likewise His compassion never ends; His compassion and unfailing love are renewed for us every morning.
“This I recall to my mind, therefore have I hope. “ When these troublesome thoughts overtake you, it is time to call to mind certain key concepts so that you can have hope, i.e. the ability to wait, completely trusting God’s timing.
 The first thing that you must recall and understand is that “The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases” (ESV). The word used for “steadfast love” in the Hebrew is hesed – the ever loyal love of God that is good and compassionate toward its objects. [3] Hesed envelops said objects, i.e. those who are believers. When grief and pain threaten to overwhelm you, you can rest in the hesed of God and have perfect hope that He is working out His plan in and through you and the pain that you experience will not overwhelm you to the point of despair.   This hesed will never be used up, never run out, or never give up.  This love of God hangs in there with you even when you are facing the most painful of circumstances.  
The second part of the verse informs us that “His mercies never come to an end” (ESV). The word for mercies actually refers to a family type of love.[4]  God loves you in your pain just as though you were family, and the really good news is that you are if you have come to Christ in faith for salvation.  This love is never spent, never exhausted even in the face of debilitating pain.  This love persists with its objects giving rest and relief.  Jeremiah would underscore this concept in the book that bears his name,                      “I have loved you with an everlasting love, therefore I have continued my faithfulness to you” (Jeremiah 31:3, ESV).  It is this everlasting love that affords us hope in the darkest of circumstances.  Circumstances eventually end, but the love of God continues.  
The third part of the verse reminds you that the mercy and love of God are “new every morning.”  God renews His commitment to seeing you through the milieu of pain and debilitation  that threaten to undo you.  The underscoring doxology is “great is your faithfulness.”  God’s steadfastness is abundant; it surpasses your temporal pain and despair.  When you reach the end of yourself God is there and He bids you reach out and embrace his steadfast love in the face of your flagging faith and will to live. He is there even though He appears to be deafeningly silent.
As you look to his steadfast love and faithfulness, your heart should cry out that the LORD –Yahweh, your covenant keeping God is your portion -- He alone is your hope. When the pain meds afford little relief—when the nights are long—when loneliness overtakes you, He is the reason for our hope.  God and Heaven are waiting, but only in His time.  
This message gives me hope on my bad days, those days when I experience high levels of pain and discouragement.  I begin to look past the pain and look for expressions of God’s love and mercy.  He is there even when I think His silence is deafening.  God is faithful … His mercies awake with me every morning. My job is to trust Him and not surrender to despair or entertain dark thoughts, but rather to allow His faithful mercy and love to undergird me regardless of life’s circumstances.
           














[1] Lamentations 3:21-24, ESV
[2] Perchance you have come to this site and you are not certain about your relationship with God, let me share briefly how you can know for certain that you are a Christian and that these words are indeed intended for you.
You can begin a relationship with God.  First you must admit that you are sinner and that you have thought said and done things that break God’s law and violate His holiness. Second you must understand and believe that Christ died for you, taking your punishment for sin. He died on the cross for you making it possible for you to have that relationship with God. Finally, you must call on Him, trusting Him alone for salvation from your sin.  If this has been your decision, please contact me at the e-mail address associated with this blog.
[3] Logos Bible software.
[4] Logos Bible Software.

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