Psalm 119:114 (NIV)
114 You are my refuge and my shield; I have put my hope
in your word.
Here the psalmist reminds us God is our protection in the
storm. God is our shelter. We can have hope in His word when we cannot find
hope in others or ourselves.
In an interview about his book The Folly of Prayer (IVP,
2009), author and pastor Matt Woodley shared a story about his friend Theresa.
Theresa was experiencing what St. John of the Cross calls a dark night of the
soul—a period of spiritual loneliness and despair. Over the course of
describing her story, listen to how Woodley discovered that what seemed most
helpless in his ministry was actually the most helpful:
After marrying the man of her dreams, [Theresa] dropped
into the abyss of a deep depression. Everything went dark in her mind and body.
She even started writing her obituary. Three years ago I would have had plenty
of answers and solutions for her. I would have been so clever and powerful. But
now I could only sit with her in her pain. We prayed. I didn't know what to do,
didn't have any answers, so I said, "Theresa, I have no idea what to say,
so could we just read the Psalms?" Then I read Psalm 77, an agonizing
psalm of lament, and I went home. I left feeling utterly powerless, and I sure
didn't think that I made her feel better.
The next week another leader of our church visited
Theresa. She was still suffering intensely, but when the leader asked if he
could pray for her, Theresa said, "Yes, but before you pray, please read
Psalm 77. I've been clinging to it all week. It's my lifeline to God."
Apparently when we read Psalm 77 in utter powerlessness, God showed up in her
life with power.
Woodley adds: "At times the best, most powerful and
most useful way to love someone is to get to the end of myself. I admit that I
can't fix or change you. My words and my advice won't heal your brokenness. But
I can be with you, and we can go together to the Father."
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