Don’t waste your pain

 

One of the least enjoyable, yet most profound and memorable, experiences in our lives are painful experiences. Yet, they are a part of life. We all go through painful experiences. But while these experiences are painful, we have choices to make during these experiences.

Since painful experiences are a part of life, we can all relate to each other in this area. None of us escape pain, no matter how much we try to avoid it. So, when I say, “Don’t waste your pain”, I’m saying allow yourself to learn from your pain. You’re probably thinking, “Yeah, I know what I learned. I’m never going to do that again.” Well, that’s true. I understand what you’re saying. There are definitely times we get ourselves into trouble through our own bad decisions. And it’s good that we learn from those times. But we often go through painful experiences through no fault of our own. My thinking is that since we can’t avoid these things, it’s best we keep moving forward in these times, learn what we can, and not get stuck there.

It’s kind of like starting a new business. Some of you have been through this. You can probably testify that It’s usually not just an instant success. It can take time, and sometimes several years of struggle, before you reap the rewards of your effort. A friend of mine has told me about some of his struggles in starting a new business. He had experienced a great deal of difficulty in getting started. Getting new clients was a challenge and just learning how to run a business involved a learning curve. For a while he was getting so focused on advertising and how he was going to get new business that he lost sight of the reason for doing what he was doing. He’s learned over time, however, that he needed to just concentrate on helping the patients he has, knowing that if he does that, they will be more likely to tell their friends and family about him. He says now, that he’s glad he went through this painful time because he learned things he otherwise wouldn’t have learned. He learned how to be better at what he does, better at dealing with clients, and better at running a business.

So, while we enjoy the good times in our lives, we often learn more in the painful, dark times of our lives. That just seems to be the way it is. Sometimes we feel like we’re being sanded with 80 grit sandpaper. That’s just to take off the rough edges, though. We need to learn to handle the pain before we get to the success. I like to say, “You’ve got to sift through a lot of gravel before you find any gold.”

 

…Let’s go deeper

 

How does the pain translate in our lives spiritually? Well, we often go through a painful experience. Sometimes these are just painful, and sometimes God may be trying to teach us and show us some important things in these times. This is where we need to go through it with him. Not stay there, but go through it. So, we can’t be like the Israelites in the wilderness going around the same mountain. We need to be open and obedient to him. This is what I mean by ‘don’t waste your pain’. I’m saying go through that struggle trusting God, knowing that you will come out on the other side stronger and he will get you through it, and also, learning what needs to be learned.

It’s kind of like going through boot camp. Some of you were in the military and know this better than anyone, especially if you were in Special Forces or some other kind of intense training. All of this training isn’t fun. It all has a purpose and an end in mind, though. It’s meant to make you stronger.
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Psalm 119:67 says, “Before I was afflicted I went astray: but now have I kept thy word.” Then further down in verse 71 it says, “[It is] good for me that I have been afflicted; that I might learn thy statutes.” See, we often only see the benefit of these times in retrospect. This is an honest audit of those experiences. He’s saying, “I now see why it was necessary for me to go through this.”

Do you feel like you’re in the midst of pain and don’t know what to do right now? I can tell you one thing. God will help you through it if you look to him. Be watchful and listen for his voice to lead you through it. Trust that he knows what he’s doing. There’s a verse in Job 23:10: “But he knoweth the way that I take: [when] he hath tried me, I shall come forth as gold.” Job is an often used example of pain and suffering. In all that Job went through he had questions, but his trust was ultimately in God. I love his confidence in his trial—that he believed God knew what he was doing. There’s so much in this verse. See, God knows how to bring the best out of you.

God doesn’t allow, or use, struggles in our lives because he doesn’t love us, but because he does. He sees the potential you have. Just like gold needs to be refined, so do we. There’s a refining process for gold where the impurities are removed, until all that’s left is the pure gold. Do you feel like this? Are you going through the Refiner’s fire right now? Trust Him in it.

This is one thing I’ve learned in life: Suffering is the great clarifier of things, and the great purifier of man. What that means is that the things that I didn’t understand about life before, I now understand. And the impurities that were in my life before, I now have a proper perspective on those, and it’s helped to purge them from my life.

Psalm 119:67 and 71 says, “Before I was afflicted I went astray: but now have I kept thy word. [It is] good for me that I have been afflicted; that I might learn thy statutes.”

Job 23:10: “But he knoweth the way that I take: [when] he hath tried me, I shall come forth as gold.”

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