Benefits of sufferings
“and he said, "I called out of my distress
to the LORD, And He answered me I cried for help from the depth of Sheol; You
heard my voice” (Jonah 2:2).
How do we respond to the hardships
we have in our lives? Henry Nowen
suggests to response in four ways in his book, "Turn My Mourning into
Dancing." There are 4 steps to
dance with God:
(1)
The first step is
to grieve the pain and suffering we go through.
We have to cry when
we have to cry. We must weep in front of
the cross. And when we go through pain
and suffering, we must go to our Heavenly Father and tell him what we are going
through. But I think many of us don’t
want to acknowledge our pain and suffering, but rather try to deny, ignore, or
suppress them in our hearts deeply. If
we do, then our sufferings will not benefit us.
Rather, as in the case of the Israelites in the Old Testament, there
will be a greater likelihood of committing sin to God by grumbling and
complaining.
(2)
The second step is
to face the causes of pain and pain.
We must look
straight at the hidden loss of injustice, shame and guilt that paralyze
us. What causes pain and suffering? We must know what the cause is so that we can
look straight to our pain and suffering.
Many times we seem to be unaware of the cause of our suffering and
pain. So we cannot face the causes of
pain and sorrow, and even though we know the cause, our human instincts are
familiar with avoiding the cause rather than directly look straight at
them. We cannot enjoy the grace given by
God through pain and suffering until we face the cause of the pain and
suffering that we are experiencing.
(3)
The third step is
to go through pain and suffering, loss and wound and pass through it.
We should never
pour too much energy into denying our pain and suffering. Rather, we must enter into the suffering,
pain, loss, and wounds as we acknowledge them.
We should not evade anymore. We
must enter the tunnel of pain and suffering.
Though it may be dark and frightening, we still have to enter that
tunnel. Without entering the tunnel of
pain and suffering, there is no benefit of the suffering.
(4)
The last fourth
step is to meet Heavenly Father in pain, suffering, loss and wound.
We must enter into
the tunnel of suffering, pain, loss and wound and feel the pain, suffering,
loss and wound of Jesus. Then, there is
healing in our pain and wounds.
Furthermore, we can be used as a tool of the Lord as a wounded healer.
We
can summarize the sufferings of Jonah in four parts:
(1)
The suffering of
Jonah was the stomach of the great fish.
Look at Jonah 2:1 –
“Then Jonah prayed to the LORD his God from the stomach of the fish.” Jonah's first suffering was "the depth
of Sheol" (v. 2). Like a darkened
cave, Jonah, who was in the stomach of the great fish deep in the sea, was
struck by the painful situation that looked around the north, south, west, and
there seemed to be no solution. He was
imprisoned like the Israelites who had been imprisoned in front of the Red Sea
at the time of the Exodus (though this was King Pharaoh's thoughts and not the
thoughts of the Israelites). Everything
Jonah believed in this world was cut off.
When we are in hopeless desperate situation like Jonah, we must look to
the Lord who is our true Hope. This is
the first benefit of suffering.
(2)
The suffering of
Jonah was the Lord's wave.
Look at Jonah 2:3 –
“For You had cast me into the deep, Into the heart of the seas, And the current
engulfed me All Your breakers and billows passed over me.” Here the word “breakers” refers to God’s
given waves that were breaking Jonah (Park Yun-sun). Not only God was breaking the ship that Jonah
was aboard, but also Jonah's heart as well.
God was breaking the harden heart of Jonah, who forgot the Lord's
mission and disobeyed God's command and running away, so that he might soften
Jonah’s heart in order for him to obey God’s command. This is the second benefit of suffering.
(3)
The suffering of
Jonah was the feeling that Jonah was expelled from God’s sight.
Look at Jonah 2:4 –
“So I said, 'I have been expelled from Your sight ….” Jonah had this feeling because he was running
away from God (1:3). In other words,
Jonah was trying to flee from God’s presence so he felt that God had left Him
and was far away from him. In a word,
Jonah felt that God forsaken him. So are
we. When do we feel that we have been
forsaken by God? It is when we disobey
God's commands like Jonah and flee far away from God's presence we can feel
that God has forsaken us. Especially when
we are in trouble, no matter how we pray to God, we receive no answer of our
prayer from God. Then we can feel that
God has hid his face from us and God has forsaken us. That was how the psalmist felt. That was why he cried out like this in Psalms
22:1 – “My God, my God, why have You forsaken me? Far from my deliverance are
the words of my groaning.” We can have a
feeling that God has forsaken us when there is no answer of prayer from God and
no help in spite of groaning and crying.
This feeling of being forsaken by God must have been greater pain than
physically suffering by God’s wave and being in the stomach of the great
fish. It is the most painful feeling
that we have been forsaken by God than any discipline, as if we were stuck in a
dark room when we were disciplined by our father, and felt that we were
abandoned by our beloved father rather than discipline by our father's
stick. But in this suffering, the
blessing that God gives us is that we may hear the cry of Jesus “’Eloi, Eloi,
lama sabachthani?’-- which means, ‘My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?’”
of the crucified Jesus (Mk. 15:34). When
we hear this voice of Jesus Christ on the cross, we are convinced and assured
that we are not forsaken by God forever because of Jesus, the only begotten Son
of God was forsaken by his own Father God for us. This is the third benefit of suffering.
(4)
The suffering of
Jonah was that he was fainting away.
Look at Jonah 2:7 –
“"While I was fainting away, ….”
The word 'faint' here means 'to decline'. This word tells that Jonah was in extreme
discord. The situation of Jonah's
suffering could not escape (or be saved) by the power of man in his total
incompetence, and it was an extreme despair that such a situation was three
days old. In the desperation of
experiencing total helplessness and total incompetence, the grace that God
gives us is to look to Him who is the hope of salvation. And by looking at the Lord of salvation, God
enables us to confess from our hearts and lips that "Salvation is from the
Lord" (v. 9). This is the fourth
and great benefit of suffering.
We must enjoy the grace of God
through suffering in our lives. In
particular, like Jonah, when we are running away from God by disobeying God's
command, we must enjoy the benefits of God's suffering while dancing with God
through the great winds of suffering that God gives us. Hence, we also pray that we may confess like
the psalmist: “It is good for me that I was afflicted, That I may learn Your
statutes” (Ps. 119:71).
Learning
to dance with God and match His steps,
James
Kim
(While
enjoying the benefits of sufferings)
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