Pain doesn’t vanish when we pretend it isn’t there. It grows quieter, then heavier, until it reshapes our days in ways we never chose. We’re taking a different path—learning to lament—so we can name what’s broken, bring it to God, and find real rest for tired souls.
We start by defining biblical lament as passionate, honest prayer that acknowledges sorrow, confusion, and loss while moving toward trust. From the Psalms’ language of refuge to Jesus’ invitation to the weary in Matthew 11, we draw a clear map: God is big enough for your tears and kind enough to hold them. Along the way, we share personal stories of grief, including infertility, and how the practice of lament created space for healing without minimizing pain or rushing to “fix” feelings.
We also confront why lament is hard. Pride tells us to keep it together. Culture offers endless escapes—scrolling, streaming, substances, busyness—that numb for a night but steal tomorrow’s peace. Instead, we walk through a simple, repeatable rhythm: name what’s wrong, ask honest questions, bring it to God, and pivot toward trust. We talk about the difference between saying “It’s okay” and saying “I forgive you,” why avoiding pain becomes a quiet form of lying, and how lament transforms anger into energy for faithful action.
If you’re ready for tools, we share them: journaling prompts that help you speak what hurts, scriptures that steady the heart, and how to create conversations that hold space with questions like “What’s been hard about that?” We recommend resources that deepen the practice—Dark Clouds, Deep Mercy; Gentle and Lowly; Suffering Is Never for Nothing; Good and Angry—and name when a wise, biblical counselor can help shoulder the load.
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BOOK RECOMMENDATIONS from this week's episode:
Amazon.com : dark clouds deep mercy
Amazon.com : suffering is never for nothing elisabeth elliot
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