A Word for Those Who Hurt Today
The reality of life in a broken world is that we hurt.
And perhaps nowhere is this pain more poignant than in the lives of hurting children.
We see brokenness both in the news and in our homes. We see it in overpacked orphanages and CPS offices. And we watch its devastating effects in hateful outbursts, inability to trust, and unrelenting heartbreak.
Like the Psalmist, we cry How long, O Lord?
But regardless of what you’re feeling and facing today, there is hope.
Today and every day, God is the answer to our brokenness and hurt.
But how? Here are 3 quick ways—
1. God understands your pain.
“For we do not have a high priest Who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but One Who in every respect has been tempted as we are …” (Hebrews 4:15)
God would have been kind to include those words in Scripture even if we had no specific examples to prove them true.
So how much more powerful do these words become when we remember Jesus’s life and death? Jesus entered into the fullness of human dysfunction when He unjustly suffered the wrath of God on our behalf. No human suffering—before or after—has been more undeserved or gone more unresolved, and yet Jesus embraced it for our good and His glory.
He knows how it feels to be hurt by those He loves.
He knows what it’s like to suffer silently.
Yes, He knows what it is to die to self so that someone else may live.
He knows … and He cares.
2. God has a bigger plan for your suffering.
Christianity is compelling precisely because it doesn’t waste an ounce of suffering for those who know Jesus. There is not one example of pain in your life—not the disappointment, not the grief, not the mistreatment—over which God is unable or unwilling to write “GOOD.”
“And we know that for those who love God all things work together for good, for those who are called according to His purpose.” (Romans 8:28)
This doesn’t mean each situation is good in the moment. And it certainly doesn’t mean it ever feels good. But there’s nothing in your life that God can’t redeem for your good.
Every pain and disappointment—in your life or the life of your child—is allowed for your deepest, highest, and longest good. How is that possible?—Because God is able, and because sin was avenged in the death of Jesus.
3. God is willing and able to meet your deepest need.
The work you are doing to love and provide for children in your life is really no different than the work God is doing to love and provide for you. Both were made possible because of what Jesus did at the Cross.
And since He’s now called you to the task of caring for a child in need, He will supply all you need to obey.
“He Who did not spare His own Son but gave Him up for us all, how will He not also with Him graciously give us all things?” (Romans 8:32)
You can face today, tomorrow, next week, and the next 50 years because God wrote the word “good” over the worst day in human history—Good Friday. And He’s equally committed to writing “good” over the worst days in your life.
What does God have to do with your current brokenness and hurt today?—everything.
READ STORIES OF GOD’S PROVISION.