The Pain We Carry with Us; The Peace that Jesus Brings

Years ago, I was talking with a colleague about the challenge of dealing with difficult people. As we conversed, he quipped, “Everyone is broken” and I have remembered that saying ever since. In a way, he was right. We all walk around with hidden scars and concealed pain. Sometimes, if people know our history, they may be familiar with a grief that stays with us or a loss that we are enduring, but often, each person we encounter has some aspect of brokenness that we don’t readily see. We experience them soldiering on, trying to make the best of a difficult situation. We witness them doing what they can to not let the pain bring them down. But we never know about the concealed burden they carry.  Behind every smile is a history of heartache and hurt. For everyone who answers that they are “doing fine,” there is a time in their life when they were not. 

The follower of Christ is not exempt from having a backstory of difficulty.  They have the Holy Spirit working within them to comfort and give them strength, and ultimately they know that they will experience victory in Christ. Yet still, there are hurts that have not fully healed; there are aches they have not faded away. Even now, they may be in a season where they desire to be running the race God has given them, but He may be calling them to faithfully walk instead. Taking one slow step after the next may be His way of leading them through their own valley of shadow and death.

And that’s what the follower of Christ who is suffering must remember. While others may not see the bumps that dot their path, our Savior does. While others may not know the burden they carry with them, their Redeemer is well aware. They may have pain and heartache that stays with them wherever they go, but Jesus goes with them too. And no matter what difficulty we have experienced, no matter what challenge we are walking through, He is greater than them all. Despite the losses that linger and the uncertainties that creep into our mind; despite the hurts that haunt us and the brokenness that has yet to completely heal, He can give us peace. Peace that “is not as the world gives” (John 14:27) – it comes not from current conditions or tranquil circumstances – but peace that passes all understanding because our hearts and minds, our hurts and our pain, our past and our trials – our guarded by Christ Jesus (Phil 4:7). In the midst of the brokenness, He restores our souls.

The words that my colleague spoke were, to some extent, true. We are all broken – or to put it more accurately – we have all been broken. We all have pain and hurt – physical, relational, or emotional – that has scarred our hearts. But as we rely on Christ we can have healing despite pain, we can have restoration despite the hurt. Because when our eyes are fixed on Him rather than what we have or what we lack, He has promised to give us peace (Is. 26:3). As His Word promises, “He heals the brokenhearted and binds up their wounds” (Ps. 147:3). What a wonderful Savior we serve!

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Relying on the Spirit of God at Work within Us

For the Christian, our fight against sin can be a wearisome one. There are times when we may grow discouraged by our ongoing indulgence of temptation and the frequency with which we allow unrighteousness to be displayed in our lives. The call to “be holy” as our Savior is holy (I Pet 1:15) can appear to be a goal that is impossible to reach. 

While it is true that we will never be perfectly holy this side of Heaven, looking towards our Savior is exactly what we should do as we strive in our sanctification. We may be tempted to think that the life of One who is fully divine cannot be a representative model for us. Yet in his book, The Man Christ Jesus, Bruce Ware reminds us that as One who was also fully human, Jesus lived His life in reliance on the Spirit of God at work within Him. This is the same manner in which His followers are called to live. Ware exhorts us thusly:  

This side of the empty tomb and Pentecost, we, too, may live lives marked by that same supernatural Spirit-wrought empowerment for obedience and faithfulness. The very resource of Holy Spirit empowerment granted to Jesus for his life of obedience and faithfulness to the Father is now granted to Jesus’s disciples as they carry forward the message of Christ, living lives of obedience to Christ, all in the power of the Spirit. [p. 38-39]

The Spirit that was at work in our Savior is at work in His followers today. What comfort and encouragement this is!

Ware continues: 

Although Jesus possessed fully his divine nature, and through his divine nature he had access to infinite divine wisdom and power, he accepted instead the role of living life in dependence upon what the Spirit would provide for him for the purpose of living life as one of us, as a man with all the limitations that such a life involves. Rather than drawing upon the infinite resource of his divine nature, he prayed for help and trusted both his Father and the Spirit to bring to him what he needed. He accepted our life as his own, and in this he showed amazing humility. Marvel at this humble Son, who, though fully God, accepted living life as a man, dependent upon the Spirit each day of his life. Marvel and then worship. [p. 44]

May we too live lives of dependence on the Spirit at work within us. May we faithfully ask Him for help and trust in our Father to give us what we need. May we indeed be amazed at the Son who left Heaven’s throne room to condescend and live among us. And may we worship the righteous Savior that He is.

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