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Friday, October 10, 2025

Healing Process for Racing Thoughts: A Pathway to the Truth of the Situation with God's Help


"A famous evangelist told the following incident: I have a friend who in a time of business recession lost his job, a sizable fortune, and his beautiful home. To add to his sorrow, his precious wife died; yet he tenaciously held to his faith -- the only thing he had left. One day when he was out walking in search of employment, he stopped to watch some men who were doing stonework on a large church. One of them was chiseling a triangular piece of rock. 'Where are you going to put that?' he asked. The workman said, 'Do you see that little opening up there near the spire? Well, I'm shaping this stone down here so that it will fit in up there.' Tears filled my friend's eyes as he walked away, for the Lord had spoken to him through that laborer whose words gave new meaning to his troubled situation." -Our Daily Bread.

Last week we talked about the problem of evil and suffering in the world, from a high view perspective, the big overarching philosophical issue. Today we’re going to hone in on that same struggle, but we’re going to see from the perspective of our own lives.

Particularly, one incident in your life, maybe something you’re going through right now. For each person in the room today, it’ll be different. It could be a struggle at work. Or a health problem. It could be someone you loved that you lost recently. It could be issues in your family, with your children, or your wife or husband. It could be an addiction you’re struggling with quietly. It could be a memory that haunts you. Or even something looming in the future.

As we go through the message today, I want you to hone in on that one thing, and consider how God’s word today can speak into that situation, and help you.

We’re going to be in Psalm 13. I’ll be teaching from the NIV. David wrote this Psalm, most likely during a time when he was being pursued by King Saul. His stress must’ve been high. And David writes this psalm to God to express what he’s going through, and how God helped him.

Let’s dive in today, verse 1: “How long, Lord? Will you forget me forever?”

As soon as a struggle, a tense situation starts in your life, some new health problem, something at work with the boss, loss of a loved one, the first thing I often think is, I can’t stand how I feel right now. How long will this last?

We are waiting in time, as a feeling comes over us that is so strong.

Second part of verse 1, “How long will you hide your face from me?”

It is the perception of David, accurately I believe, that God has hidden his face from him during this struggle.

What does the Bible mean by the face of God? The Hebrew word for the face of God is often translated as "presence." It is the sense of God’s presence in your life.

Very hard to describe this feeling, of sensing God with you at any given moment. I know for me either you sense it or you don’t. But I know when I’m fasting, it will intensify, and I’m more aware of it.

Essentially, you can feel when God is with you. It’s a unique sense, no way I can say how to describe that feeling.

Is it possible that the David is not sensing the presence of God simply because the pain he’s going through is so intense? That’s possible.

I also think it’s just as much true that sometimes God will hide his presence from us for certain periods to teach us something.

As the old saying goes, “The teacher is silent during the test.” So I think this is one of those situations where David is going through it, God masks his presence temporarily, as a form of a test. Will you trust me or not? Your choice. The test begins.

Like David, we experience from time to time a trauma in our lives. Some event that unsettles us. And so the test begins.

I’ll give an example from my own life. When I was in my early teens my dad would make me go to a lot of basketball camps to get better at basketball. I hated these camps. I dreaded it. My dad would let me know ahead of time he had signed me up, and for usually weeks ahead of it, I would worry, and worry, and worry each day, counting down the days until the dreaded day came.

I learned to live in fear, worry, and anxiety.

David describes this in verse 2, “How long must I wrestle with my thoughts…”

Oh, to wrestle with those thoughts. You’ve been there haven’t you? The thoughts just keep repeating in your mind, often charged up with emotion surrounding the thought, over and over and over.

In recovery groups, we’d call that squirrel caging. Or hamster wheel. It’s a funny way to describe it, but it’s actually very serious.

The thought just keeps going and going. We replay the resentment over and over, and each time we replay it we refeel it, the anger, the frustration, the confusion, and at it’s worst it can torment us.

So how do we deal with this the repeating thought? Because it can be bad.

There are several solutions. One of the best is to talk to a friend or your pastor, or your wife or husband, and just express the emotion and the thought, and process it.

Another helpful thing is to write it on paper in a journal.

Going for a walk, and just letting out the physical energy can be helpful. Taking a shower can be helpful.

Talking to God about it in prayer, can be so helpful.

However I’ve found that all of those things may not stop the thought process. Because there is a purpose in the thought process.

So, pray over the thought process. I wish I knew that when I was dreading basketball camp, but I didn’t. I didn’t know God that way.

But, when we pray, and let the Spirit lead, the thought process can begin to be drawn in a good direction.

Often God is bringing up the thought to encourage an action in us, connected with the thought. Not always. Sometimes it’s just our mind expressing emotion. But, as we wrestle with the thought, the praying can help guide the thought toward the right path.

Now, it may not always be that. There may be no action needed. In that case as you pray you’ll sense God saying “Be still and know that I’m god.” No action needed.

But, it may be God is helping us wrestle with the thought toward the truth of the situation.

Often if Chelsey and I have a disagreement in our marriage, we will engage in a conversation. Often once we can get past our upset emotions, and we both hear each other, and say "OK I can see you perspective" we begin to approach the truth. She or I see the past trauma link with the current discussion. And we say "Oh, that’s why! You were hurt in a similar way when you were younger." And we find peace.

The goal in the thought-wrestling many times, is to get past the emotion to the truth.

For that we must accept an important principle: I will be Spirit-led not emotion-led.



Often there is a light path and a dark path in the thought-process. The light path leads to the truth. The dark path can lead to ending up stuck in resentment, or fear or anger or some other emotional state. We take an unproductive course. This is where long term trauma can develop, when something sits unresolved, until it’s a painful memory that we can’t even bear to think about.

These are the thoughts. What about the heart? 

Second part of verse 2, “...and day after day have sorrow in my heart?”

Connected with the racing thoughts is often a sorrow in the heart.

It’s a two-fold punch, when we face suffering. The thoughts race and the heart hurts. It’s no wonder we long for God’s help and want the situation to end as soon as possible.

I would push through basketball camp with such fear, and anxiety. The bad things I feared wouldn’t always happen. But sometimes they did. I would get bullied. Verbally harassed. Every sense in my body felt heightened. Fear was my constant companion. 

I remember one time we were waiting by the buses that took us from the dorms to the gymnasiums. There was another player there, a bully who was also in wrestling. And he and his buddies took great pleasure in cornering me and putting me into wrestling moves. One they loved to do to me was put me in the "Texas cloverleaf." I tried to push through, but I became overwhelmed, and I ran away. I was hiding and crying when a kindly janitor found me. He took me to his dorm where he stayed on campus, and he let me lay down in his daughter's bed, she was away of course, and I laid there and wept. Being in a painful situation long enough leads to heart sorrow. The word of God says, "Fathers do not exasperate your sons, or they will give up" (Colossians 3:21).

Next, David writes, “How long will my enemy triumph over me?”

It can be so hard when we see evil winning in the world, and the good guys in retreat.


Who is this enemy? For David it’s a person, King Saul most likely. Who is it for you? A person maybe? A place, a job, an institution? For me it’s often the devil, demonic forces.

But we do face another enemy, one we must deal with: Ourselves. I’m often my worst enemy. My fallen nature doesn’t want to respond the right way to trauma. It wants to hide it, ignore it, leave it in the past. We as Christians often must combat our own sinful attitudes, and say no, I’m going to do the opposite of what I want to do, I’m going to instead do what God wants me to do.

As Jesus said, "Deny yourself, take up your cross, and follow me" (Matthew 16:24).

Heavy first few verses, I know. But it’s about to get brighter.

Verse 3, “Look on me and answer, Lord my God.”

David sensed God’s face was turned away from him, he is asking God to come and be present in the situation once again. He has turned to prayer, and to seeking God.

Think about all David was going through. He had been anointed king, but then rejected by Saul, who feared him and was jealous of him.

David and his band of followers were having to run and hide from an entire nation that was following Saul. I can’t imagine the kind of stress he was feeling, I was stressed at basketball camp, David was fearing for his very life day and night. I can’t imagine how that must’ve felt.

But David’s turn here is very important. He turns from looking at his own heart and thoughts, which was good, but better now, he's looking directly at God saying please come and be in this.

Next, he says, “Give light to my eyes…”

This could be David asking for wisdom. I think that’s true. But also I think it means, “God show me your way through this.” Or "God carve a path through the wilderness for me." It’s not just asking for advice, it’s asking God to create a path through the struggle.

God create the path, show me through and I’ll walk it.

When your in a traumatic event, many of you are in them now, wrestle in your thoughts, wrestle in your heart, but then begin to look up toward God. Begin to pray and say: "God, create a path through, and give me the wisdom to walk it."

Verse 3 is the turning point... “Give light Lord.”

Next: “Or I will sleep in death, 4 and my enemy will say, “I have overcome him,” and my foes will rejoice when I fall."

Sometimes we go to the worst case scenario, David goes there and says God if you don’t show up, my enemies will overcome me and rejoice over my fall.

Our minds often go to the worst possible thing. My mom would often come to me when I was younger, and I was so prone to worry. My mom would say, "What’s the worst thing that could happen?" And it usually wasn’t so bad. Don’t sink into the negative.

Walking by the Spirit I’ve found is a bit like surfing on water. If we ride the waves of the Spirit in faith, we ride high, but when we start to doubt, and become negative, we start to sink in the waters, just like Peter when he walked on the water toward Jesus.

We can acknowledge the worst case scenario, while also not getting stuck on it. Instead stay focused on the scriptures. I can do all things through Christ who gives me strength. I shall not fear, though the earth gives way, though the mountains be moved into the heart of the sea. I will be still and know that you are God!

David is wrestling through to a place of beauty, a place of peace, a beautiful meadow, green and lush, bright, and gentle, a place called trust.

Verse 5: “But I trust in your unfailing love; my heart rejoices in your salvation.”

I think the pains we go through in life can be so strong that they hit us the way a sudden storm on the waters hits a boat, one moment the waters are clear and the next a storm hits.

I think for that reason, when the trauma first hits, we focus so much on it, that our trust in God is shaken. We are so focused on the struggle, it shakes our trust.

But, as we process the thoughts, feel the sorrow in our hearts, we wrestle toward the truth. We don’t stuff the situation, or hide from it, we boldly face it, and allow the emotions to flow, then we find a pathway that appears, a way out provided by God. We call on God. God delivers us. And we go up to a higher level of trust, because of what we’ve been through.

We dare to say, “God I trust you in this too.”

This is very pleasing to God. I think it’s the ultimate desired outcome for every pain we go through: To wrestle through, to a place of saying, “God I trust you here too.”

But we have a choice. Unfortunately many choose to say to God: "You let me down, I don’t trust you, how could you let this happen?" And the test is not passed.

This doesn’t mean it’s over or anything, we still belong to God, but the test may repeat again in the future, to give us another opportunity to pass into that higher level of trust.

These scenarios are often test cases: Can you come up to a higher level of trust? Once we do, it’s like the living waters open up to us.

We access the gifts in Jesus Christ our savior. We have so many benefits in the cross of Jesus Christ. More than I think we realize! They are all accessed by the key to the door, which is trust, or faith.

Then the living waters flow through the situation. The living waters flow from the Father, through Jesus Christ, and by way of the Holy Spirit. And we find healing.

At the beginning of the message I asked you to identify the situation you connect with current pain in your life. Would you like to dunk that situation in the living waters of Jesus Christ?

We’re going to pray. I challenge you as we pray, to choose trust of your God in that situation, no matter how painful. As you do, you’ll sense those living waters flow in, because by trusting Him, you’re giving it to him.

Note: Remember, unforgiveness can be a barrier to healing. If there is someone you need to forgive for what they did, pray that prayer of forgiveness first, and ask for God's grace to overcome any bitterness. Also, if there is an active sin involved, you'll want to make a prayer of repentance and ask Christ's forgiveness as well. Unrepentant sin can be a barrier for healing as well.  

Prayer: “Father, we show you the situation we’re in. The memory. The past trauma. The current struggle. Father we confess the pain. We confess the confusion. But, today, we choose to say, Father, we put it in your hands, lighten our eyes, or we will sleep in death. We trust you, we trust in your unfailing love. This situation, we surrender it to you, it’s yours. We trust you. Heal our hearts. Heal our minds. Wash us in your living water, in Jesus name, amen.”

Last verse, as we trust it to God, our heart sorrow turns into heart rejoicing.

Verse 6, “I will sing the Lord’s praise, for he has been good to me.”

David went from questioning where God even was in verse 1, to finally saying, I sing God’s praises, for he has been good to me.

We’ve found peace again. We trusted him. The living waters have flowed in. The pain melts away. And it’s replaced by "shalom shalom" the peace of Jesus Christ.

God has been good to me, we declare. And the story of the hurt and healing, becomes part of our testimony. A story of redemption.

Review of Main Points:
  1. Waiting in suffering is the challenge
  2. In suffering God will sometimes hide his face
  3. Wrestling in our thoughts can lead toward the truth
  4. Sometimes the enemy we face is ourselves
  5. Turn to God, and ask Him to create a path forward
  6. Trust leads to the living waters of healing
  7. The story of the struggle becomes our testimony

Monday, October 6, 2025

The Problem of Suffering and Evil in the World


I ran away from Him,
Down the nights and down the days;
I ran from Him,
Down the arches of the years;
I ran from Him,
Through the twists of my own mind—
And in the confusion of my fears,
I hid from Him,
And still He followed.

With steady steps and a quiet voice,
He followed after me.
No matter how fast I ran,
Or how far I tried to escape,
I always heard His feet behind me—
Unhurrying, unyielding,
Yet filled with love.

I tried to find comfort
In everything but Him:
In people, in pleasure,
In beauty, in dreams.
I wanted to be free from His presence,
Thinking I would find peace,
If only I could leave Him behind.

But everywhere I turned,
The things I loved failed me.
The light I chased faded,
The joy I wanted turned bitter.
And always, behind it all,
His voice kept calling me:
"Nothing you find can satisfy you,
Unless it comes from Me."

I told myself He was cruel,
That He would rob me of happiness.
But still He followed,
Not with anger,
But with patient love.

When I finally stopped running,
Broken and exhausted,
He was still there—
Not to punish,
But to gently ask,
"Why do you run from the One who loves you most?"

He showed me
That every loss I suffered,
Every door that closed,
Was His mercy in disguise—
Turning me back toward the only joy
That would ever be real.
-Hound of Heaven (modern English)

This is an excerpt from a famous poem called the Hound of Heaven by Francis Thompson, published in 1890. It helps us understand our situation as humans. We are often like the man in the poem, in a cloud of anxiety and confusion running away from God, looking around at a dangerous world, with child-like emotions, anger, fear, despair, wondering, why is there all this evil in the world? Even as Christians we often run from God. But like the man in the poem, if we could slow and turn around, we’d see His love is pursuing us.

Lately in our country we’ve seen violence, and we’ve wondered, what is going on? What is the source of this evil?

Today we’re addressing the topic of Why is there suffering and evil in the world. We’re going to look at the origin of evil and suffering, and then discuss how we can respond to these things in the right way.

Here’s our first clue: There is a genealogy in Genesis chapter 5 that goes through the names of all the descendants of Adam, the first man, all the way down to Noah. If you list all the names in order, you find that each name has a meaning, just as any of our names have a meaning. My name is Justin, it means to be justified. The first name Adam, means man.

Second name, Seth means appointed. Enosh means mortal. Kenan means sorrow. Mahalalel means the blessed God. Jared means shall come down. Enoch means teaching. Methusaleh means “his death shall bring.” Lamech means the despairing. Noah means comfort or rest.

If you put all those meanings into a sentence it reads: “Man appointed mortal sorrow, the blessed God shall come down teaching; His death shall bring the despairing rest.”

Man appointed, it says, mortal sorrow. Where did suffering come from? The answer is, it came from humanity. God did not initiate it. Humans did.

We consider the account of the book of Genesis. We see Adam and Eve, the first two humans, and they were innocent, they were holy. They lived with God in the garden. God walked among the garden with them. There was no sin then, no suffering.

We know that Adam and Eve were given authority over the garden, to tend it. They were told there was one rule, do not eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.

But next we see Adam and Eve, and the serpent, this fallen being, tempt Adam and Eve. The serpent tells them, Genesis 3:4-5 “You will not certainly die,” the serpent said to the woman. 5 “For God knows that when you eat from it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.”

So began the difficult situation we find ourselves in today. Adam and Eve were innocent and pure. Satan was corrupted with evil, and he used the power of deception to bring in suffering for humanity.

We know God was left with no choice, but in his justice, to send Adam and Eve out of the garden. Creation was cursed. The world became fallen. The entire paradigm shifted.

The cursed creation would exist for one purpose: To provide humanity one more chance to turn back to God before the end. Humans would continue to be born and spread out on the Earth. That was always the plan. But now, they would all be affected by the sin virus that Adam and Eve had allowed in.

Humans had turned against God and joined the rebellion that started with Satan and his demons. But God immediately established a plan to save humanity.

God decided he would come himself, as Jesus into the world, to pay the blood price that we owed, so if we trusted in God’s gift of forgiveness, then we could be delivered from the sin nature we’ve inherited from Adam and eve, and we could become part of the new humanity who is led not by Adam and eve, but by Jesus Christ the messiah.

Our scripture for today is Psalm 10, that deals extensively with the problem of evil and suffering.

Psalm 10 begins like this: “1 Why, Lord, do you stand far off?
Why do you hide yourself in times of trouble?”

This is the cry of the heart when we face suffering. We cry out and say Lord where are you?

Many in our world refuse to believe in God, because of the evil and suffering in the world. They say how can there be a good god if children die of hunger, if people die of cancer, how can there be a good god if hurricanes destroy villages and floods sweep away the impoverished?

This is probably thee reason why many leave behind God, their experience of suffering leads them to reject God.

So it’s vital that we understand how God’s system works. We see that every human being born is born with a gift that many of us aren’t even fully aware of, the gift of free will.

We get to choose. And God has written it into the system that he is not able to force free choices.

If God deleted free will from the system, of course there would be no evil or suffering. But there would also be no love. And love is the most important thing in the universe. If I could force Chelsey my wife to love me, is that really love? No it’s force. But, if Chelsey freely chooses to love me, that’s real love.

Next verses 2-3: “In his arrogance the wicked man hunts down the weak, who are caught in the schemes he devises. He boasts about the cravings of his heart; he blesses the greedy and reviles the Lord.”

We live in a world where we’re affected by the poor decisions of other humans. I have free will, they have free will. And we’re all on this planet together. So we find situations where the wicked hunt down the weak, plot against the faithful, they celebrate sin, they bless the greedy, and they despise the Lord almighty.

We often look at the evil all around us, in other people, in institutions, and we cry out to God to put an end to evil. But what about the evil in us? If God were to deal with evil right now, he’d have to deal with us. And get rid of that evil too.

Now as we Christians we would say, well we’re righteous because of Jesus, we don’t have evil, because Jesus has covered our sins. This is true. But, what about our unsaved loved ones who we pray for day and night?

God is being patient, waiting for them to come in. And so he is patient with all the evil in the world, waiting and giving time for everyone to have the opportunity to say yes to Jesus.

Why suffering? God’s open door for all.

Next, verses 4-5: “In his pride the wicked man does not seek him;
in all his thoughts there is no room for God.
5 His ways are always prosperous;
your laws are rejected by him;
he sneers at all his enemies.”

In all his thoughts, no room for God. Evil is so terrible, and the evil person, the sinful person is a horror to witness. I think of myself before I was saved, and it was not pretty.

But here we get another key to the truth about suffering. What we are in very important, more important than we realize.

The bible tells us we are made in the image of God. That’s not said of animals, plants, even the angels. We are unique. So much so that we’re told that if we endure to the end with Christ, we will inherit the kingdom of God.

So what we are is very special. This explains why the punishment for rejecting Christ is so severe, eternity in hell. Because we were to be the crown of God’s creation, to share in our God’s authority over all he made. Think about that for a second. To share in his authority, to rule over everything he made. We were made to be given great authority, and with great authority comes great responsibility. That’s why the end game is so serious, heaven or hell, because what we are is so unspeakably incredible and amazing and powerful. We have the spark within us of the creativity of the Creator of all!

Next, verse 6: He says to himself, “Nothing will ever shake me.”
He swears, “No one will ever do me harm.”

We desire a world where nothing will ever shake us, nothing will ever harm us. We were made for a paradise. That’s why death seems so terrible to us, it horrifies us and it should. We struggle to comprehend suffering. It’s a mystery to us.

If we want to understand the mystery of iniquity, we ought to look to two examples, the first is Job. If you want to understand suffering, look at the book of Job. Job was tested and suffered greatly, but he honored God through it, he cried out, he wrestled, but in the end, he trusted His god, and he was greatly rewarded. Job knew horrible suffering. Yet there was a purpose in all of it.

Second example, is of course Jesus himself. Jesus suffered in every way that we do. He suffered pain, despair, and difficulties. He wrestled with God like Job did, in the garden of Gethsemane.

He pleaded with God to take the suffering of the cross away. Father, if it’s possible, take this cup away from me, but your will be done, not mine.

Jesus also desired to be relieved from the suffering. But the cup was not taken from Jesus. Jesus drank that cup of brutal suffering, for us.

Can we then, through all this suffering in our lives, look to the example of Jesus, see that Jesus struggled with it too, but in the end Jesus, drank from that cup, for us. And so can we too, drink from lesser cups of suffering in our lives?

Jesus cried while nailed to the cross, “Father why have you forsaken me?!”

Jesus became suffering for us that day, he became evil for us that day. He was forsaken. And because of what Jesus did, we never have to be forsaken. We are accepted.

Jumping down to verse 14, it says, “But you, God, see the trouble of the afflicted; you consider their grief and take it in hand.
The victims commit themselves to you;
you are the helper of the fatherless.”

God sees our trouble. He doesn’t ignore. He grieves with us. It says he takes our grief in his hands. Our response then, is to commit ourselves to God. Declare, God is my helper.

Yet so often we have a struggle we’re going through, and we ask God for help, and God doesn’t move right away. He waits, or he doesn’t help us at all. Why?

Sometimes we permit suffering to continue to bring about a greater good. Example, the dentist? We go in and they drill into our teeth and it causes suffering, but, it brings about a greater good of healthy teeth. Sometimes when God waits, or doesn’t move, it is to bring about a greater good.

That isn’t always the case though, sometimes we suffer simply because we live in a fallen world that has been messed up by humans. Sometimes God steps in, sometimes God doesn’t, we have to trust Him in that.

Many philosophers have wondered at the problem of evil, and assumed, if God existed and he’s good, he would defeat evil. So there must not be a god, because evil exists.

Of course this argument is self defeating, because where do you get a rationale to call something evil or good? If evil and good exist, an objective morality exists. If an objective morality exists, you must have a moral law giver, to provide that framework, which can only come from God.

But the argument often goes like this:

If God is all good, He would defeat evil

If God is all powerful, He could defeat evil.

But evil is not defeated. Therefore God doesn’t exist.



Professor Norm Geisler, provided a response to this:

If God is all good, He would defeat evil

If God is all powerful, He could defeat evil.

Therefore evil will one day be defeated.

It is God’s character and ability to do so.

But it still begs the question: Why doesn’t God do it now?

1. He is waiting patiently for the lost to come to Christ.

2. He is allowing suffering to prepare His saints for paradise.

3. He is testing the faith of His saints to prevent any future rebellion. (meaning: Every time your faith is tested and you choose to keep trusting God, it strengthens your commitment to God. God is developing in us such a strong commitment, once we are in heaven, it will prevent any future rebellions.)

4. He is displaying/proving his righteousness in contrast to the mystery of iniquity

So we’ve talked about the Garden of Eden and the fall. We’ve talked about God’s provision of Jesus Christ as the solution to the problem. How does it all end?

We know that after the end times, and the millennial reign of Christ, the enemy is defeated, and there is a great day of judgment for every person on earth. And there are two final destinations: The New heavens and new earth, or hell.

The End game is this: God separates good from evil forever, quarantining evil in a place called hell. And good prospers in a place called paradise.

The end is just what everyone desires, “Lord end the evil and suffering.” If we accept Jesus, and allow him to save us, we will never suffer again. If we reject Jesus, we will suffer for all eternity.

In conclusion today, given all these truths about the problem of evil and suffering, how do we get through these struggles?

The first thing we want to understand is that Jesus Christ is the savior we all need, because until we have him, we are the evil in the world, and we contribute to it. When Jesus enters us, we become part of the solution.

Second thing to understand is that suffering is emotionally devastating. That’s why we get so upset when we see suffering and evil in the world. It goes against everything we’re made for, we’re made for heavenly joy. So understand that the pains you go through in life will shake your world. But also understand there is a solution to this, and it is a concept called wrestling with God.

Whether Job, or Jacob, or Abraham or Moses, or Paul or Peter or James or John, they all had one thing in common: They wrestled with God. When suffering occurred they constantly brought it to God in prayer and talked with Him, read the word, talked to friends and family about it, talked to their spiritual leaders, and through that wrestling with God, God slowly brought them to a place of blessing.

Third, expect suffering, the new testament constantly tells us to expect it, that it will happen, and James even writes that we should count it all joy when we face trials of many kinds, because the trials build and refine our faith. So often the best response to a new trial or problem is to accept it. Believe that suffering produces perseverance, and perseverance produces character.

Fourthly, as we walk through this broken world, in all the ups and downs and triumphs and tragedies, we learn to trust Him more and more. We see him deliver us time and again. We see him answer our prayers time and again. We see trials come and go. We see God mature us through these challenges. We learn to simply trust Him. And we join with Job, when he says, “Thou he slays me, yet will I trust him.”

Fifthly, ask God for healing. After the suffering, we find ourselves covered in wounds from all we’ve been through. And it’s a good thing we serve a healing God. He doesn’t want to leave us wounded from all the pains. He wants to heal us. Ask Him.

Suffering came about through evil, and evil led to deception and deception led to the fall, and the fall led to suffering. But the mighty God came down giving salvation to all who would believe. He met us in our suffering. Jesus became evil and suffering for us, so that we could be healed. Thank you Jesus for your mighty gift! Let us wrestle with God through the sufferings, seeking His wisdom, so we may be at peace despite all the wrongs we see in the world. He is able!