“And Cain said to the
Lord, ‘My punishment is greater than I can bear! Surely You have driven
me out this day from the face of the ground; I shall be hidden from Your
face; I shall be a fugitive and a vagabond on the earth, and it will
happen that anyone who finds me will kill me’” (Genesis 4:13-14).
All
who live in this world will have to deal with sorrow.
It is inevitable. In an environment where sin is a reality, the temporal
consequences of sin are unavoidable — and since sorrow is one of those
consequences, we shall have to deal with it sooner or later. The only
question is how we shall do so. It’s important to keep our sorrow from
turning into what is called “the sorrow of the world”
(2
Corinthians 7:10).
This is the sorrow that
wallows selfishly in its own misery. It does not confront sin in a godly
way.
Two things are needed to
keep our sorrow from turning into self-pity:
reverence and
gratitude. When we
are passing through any bitterness of spirit, we must maintain a humble
respect for the greatness of God as our Creator, and we must not cease
to thank Him for all that is right, despite whatever has gone wrong.
Even when the sun is shining, we find it challenging to be as reverent
and as grateful as we ought to be. However, when the darkness closes in,
keeping our thinking clear about God can seem so difficult that we
despair. We give in to the “the sorrow of the world.”
Failures of reverence and
gratitude should be seen as failures of perspective. When pain focuses
our attention on some small part of reality, we tend to lose touch with
the larger truths. This is no trivial thing, however. If we refuse to
acknowledge the whole truth about God, that refusal can cost us our
souls
(Romans 1:18-21).
God is greater than our woes, and whatever the immediate cause for our
sorrow, we simply can’t afford to forget the clear tokens of God’s
greatness and goodness in the wider world.
Edmund Spenser wrote of
the miserable fellow who finds himself “dying each day with inward
wounds of Dolour’s dart.” The sorrow of the world is deadly because it
indulges in self-justification. It fuels resentment and resistance to
God. Like Cain, the self-pitying soul feels no genuine remorse for evil.
He merely whines, “My punishment is greater than I can bear!”
Other Articles by Gary Henry
Do It Because You Don't Want To
Why Don't We Seek?
Diligently Seeking God
Seeking For Recognition