Is suffering a way of life? Can we experience joy in the midst of pain? In a previous post I asked if there is any purpose to pain? I have continued to ponder this question, and while browsing the web I came across this article titled “In Suffering and Joy” By Jake Pelfry. He worked as a group home counselor, and was faced very early on in his work with the reality of suffering. Here he presents what he so far has learnt about suffering and our perception of it.
“Working at an entry level job as a group home counselor, I was now forced to grapple with the question of how do I really deal with hurting people and explain their immense suffering to them. After just working one day on the job my eyes were instantly opened to the reality of suffering and pain found in the lives of many. Turns out, I was viewing sufffering in a very wrong way. When I first moved to the Chicago area I did not truly understand suffering. I had experienced hurt in my past. I had been betrayed, let down and broken. However, I had never known complete desperation.
Especially not the kind of desperation I heard in the voice of a woman one morning when she had called [where I worked] looking for shelter for her children. The previous night this woman had found out from her young daughter that her husband had been sexually molesting her three children for years. The daughter finally came forward after living in fear of her father who threatened to hurt her if she had said anything. The mother was devastated, she breathed with a sense of panic, and her words were muffled with pain. She was torn, and at the same time disgusted that she could have loved someone who could do such horrific acts. She was now fleeing her home hoping to find a shelter for herself and her children.
Unfortunately, this story is not uncommon. I quickly learned that Emergency Shelters receive numerous calls from hurting families. Crisis workers are deprived of sleep, answering calls throughout the night. Police officers are overwhelmed with domestic violence calls. Children are beaten up emotionally and physically every day.
I was amazed that there were so many hurting families, so many people with nowhere to go and nowhere to turn. And yet I was even more startled at how all this hurt is quickly blanketed by a sense of security that everything is nice and neat in the rich suburbs. Regrettably, this is not the case, people right where we live, are devastated and hurting on very intense levels.
At first it was easy for me to become overwhelmed, especially when I just didn’t have the answer to their problems. What can be done, anyways? Why are there so many people suffering? Why is there unbelievable pain?
I recently read a book called “In the Name of Jesus“, where theologian Henry Nouwen totally altered my attitude towards suffering. He says, “[This] discipline is the hardest one. It is the discipline to be surprised not by suffering but by joy. As we grow old, we will have to stretch out our arms, be guided and led to places we would rather not go. What was true for Peter will be true for us. There is suffering ahead of us, immense suffering, a suffering that will continue to tempt us to think that we have chosen the wrong road and that others were more shrewd than we were. But don’t be surprised by pain. Be surprised by joy, be surprised by the little flower that shows its beauty in the midst of a barren desert, and be surprised by the immense healing power that keeps bursting forth like springs of fresh water from the depth of our pain.”
After reading this I learned that I was looking through foggy eyes of expectation. Instead I should have been looking through the eyes of joy. Suffering should not overwhelm me, but instead I should be staggered by joy when it decides to shine through.
Oswald Chambers, makes note of a very similar idea: “Our Lord received Himself, accepting His position and realizing His purpose, in the midst of the fire of sorrow. He was saved not from the hour, but out of the hour … ” He goes on to state, “We say that there ought to be no sorrow, but there is sorrow, and we have to accept and receive ourselves in its fires. If we try to evade sorrow, refusing to deal with it, we are foolish. Sorrow is one of the biggest facts in life, and there is no use in saying it should not be. Sin, sorrow, and suffering are, and it is not for us to say that God has made a mistake in allowing them.”
…That day we learned together that suffering is a way of life, it will happen. But we also learned that on those days in the dreaded desert, one may find a little flower blooming in the immense heat. Its presence is comforting, and the joy it carries is overpowering.”
* Copyright © 2009 Relevant Media Group
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4 Responses to In Suffering and Joy
Carole McDonnell
February 15th, 2009 at 7:14 pm
Gosh. Not sure i agree with it. Reminds me of Buddha. Terribly overwhelmed by the sorrows in “other folks” lives. Then he grows enlightened and learns to accept it. More On the other hand, our lord challenges us to overcome evil with good and not not be overcome with evil.
It’s quite one thing for someone to look on in enlightenment on someone else’s suffering if the suffering person is not a child in his family, or if the sufferer is himself. But would he be able to live with a child suffering day by day by day with cancer or some heart-wrenching pain? I doubt it. Nah, I don’t agree with this person. -C
sonelta
February 15th, 2009 at 10:25 pm
Carole – It is certainly a challenge to consider what the author says. You mention an interesting point with regards to Buddha. I often think it is difficult for us however to accept our suffering, we don’t want it. I have mixed feelings with regard to simply finding joy in our pain and on the other side I get frustrated with the “overcoming part” because it so often does not work like that!! Certainly, when you experience pain and suffering yourself, you truly have a different perspective than if you simply see it in others.
Thanks for your comment. Let me know if you come across any articles on the subject or have other thoughts.
BROWN
February 16th, 2009 at 5:16 pm
I had this book of Mother Theresa quotes but i can’t find it. What i do remember is she had many thoughts about joy in suffering. This is a lady that truly embodied compassion in the sense of “to suffer with”, and therefore i think she is a credible source! I know she even has a book out called “Suffering Into Joy” http://www.amazon.com/Suffering-into-Joy-Theresa-Teaches/dp/0892838760
she dedicated her life to living in and amongst suffering, and now that her private diaries have been made public, we see taht she herself had a great deal of mental suffering, but yet she continued to serve those that were considered the “least among us”. so yeah. check her out!
BROWN
February 16th, 2009 at 5:26 pm
i just found this:
http://oldarchive.godspy.com/reviews/Finding-Joy-in-the-Darkest-Night-The-Divine-Abandonment-of-Mother-Teresa-by-David-Scott.cfm.html
which i felt was really good! it also sparked thoughts in me that i have never thought about before…i bet Jesus suffered greatly while he was on earth. Not just in the “suffering” tat we know so well on the cross, but imagine walking with, growing close, truly loving, smiling at, etc. people that you know will betray you and turn their back on you at the drop of a hat. He was all God and therefore had a divine knowledge of the wickedness, and beauty, of humaity, but at the very same time he was all man, and therefore struggled with thought life in the way we do and suffered mentally, physically and emotionally in the way we do. i can only imagine that his suffering was MUCH greater than anythign we could ever imagine, due to his heavenly insight. but also due to that insight, he must have been filled with great hope and joy at the very same time. crazy stuff!