“I HATE MY LIFE”
“I hate my life!” have those words ever been uttered from your lips? Regrettably, many of us have to say yes. There have been times when we are in that
deep pit of depression and the clutches of self-pity seem to have their claws
clamped down on us. It is during those
times we may utter those words, “I hate
my life!” It is times like this when
we might even wish we had never been born, just as Job does in Job 10. In fact, those are the exact words he said to
his friend, “I hate my life!” (Job 10.1) and
“I wish I had never been born” (Job
10.18-19). We might even be tempted to
say what Job says to God “…leave me
alone…” (Job 10.20). When we are in
that pit, these things become common thoughts for us. However, we must remember
that every pit was made for God to pull us out of. Maybe that is part of what God wants us to
see within the story of Job. We cannot
blame God for our pain. We must turn to
Him when we suffer and trust that when He sees fit, He will offer us relief,
encouragement and salvation. I have always been intrigued by
C.S. Lewis and his perspective on pain. Lewis had suffered so much and had
found himself in that same pit. He lost his mother at an early age, saw his dad
emotionally abandon him, suffered from a respiratory illness as a teenager,
fought and was wounded in World War I, and finally had to bury his beloved
wife. Through all of this, Lewis wrote about all his heartache in his
work “The Problem of Pain”. In this book, Lewis
penned one of his most famous lines:
“Pain
insists upon being attended to. God whispers to us in our pleasures, speaks in
our conscience, but shouts in our pain: it is His megaphone to rouse a deaf
world.” Maybe instead of wallowing in
our self-pity and focusing on our pain, we just simply need to say, “I hear you
God…I hear you!” Then turn to Him and allow
Him to do what He does best: love.
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