On Second Thought
“Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies and God of all comfort…” (2 Corinthians 1:3–4) introduces us to a truth that is both reassuring and unsettling. God is not distant from our suffering; He is deeply involved in it. Yet what often unsettles us is not His presence in our affliction, but His purpose within it. The apostle Paul the Apostle does not merely say that God comforts us—he tells us why: “so that we may be able to comfort those who are in any affliction.” This reframes suffering from being an isolated burden into becoming a shared ministry.
The Greek word for comfort, paraklēsis (παράκλησις), carries the sense of being called alongside, strengthened, and encouraged. It is not a shallow reassurance but a deep, sustaining presence. God does not simply remove pain; He enters it. And as He does, something begins to change within us. Our hearts, once guarded and self-protective, become softened. We begin to see others differently—not as interruptions to our lives, but as reflections of our own journey. This transformation is not automatic, however. It requires surrender. Left unchecked, suffering can harden us just as easily as it can humble us.
The Old Testament offers a striking illustration of this truth through the unnamed servant girl in 2 Kings. Taken captive, removed from her home, and placed in servitude, she had every reason to become bitter. Yet when her master, Naaman, was stricken with leprosy, she did not respond with indifference or resentment. Instead, she pointed him toward healing. Her suffering had not diminished her compassion; it had refined it. One cannot help but wonder what had taken place in her heart. Perhaps her own affliction had taught her to recognize the deeper needs of others. Perhaps she had come to understand that pain, when placed in God’s hands, does not end in destruction but in redirection.
This stands in contrast to how we often attempt to comfort one another. There is a temptation to explain suffering rather than enter into it. We offer solutions, quotes, or theological frameworks, hoping to bring clarity. Yet as many have discovered, explanations rarely satisfy a wounded soul. The book of Job reminds us of this. When Job’s friends first arrived, they did something remarkable—they sat with him in silence for seven days. “No one spoke a word to him, for they saw that his grief was very great” (Job 2:13). In that silence, they honored his pain. It was only when they began to speak that they began to fail.
True comfort requires presence before explanation. It requires humility to admit that we do not have all the answers. As C.S. Lewis once wrote, “God whispers to us in our pleasures, speaks in our conscience, but shouts in our pains.” That statement carries an insightful observation: suffering has a way of opening our hearts to hear God in ways that comfort alone cannot. Yet the voice we need to hear most clearly in those moments is not our own reasoning, but Christ Himself.
This is why the writer of Hebrews points us to Jesus as our ultimate source of comfort. “For we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses” (Hebrews 4:15). The Greek word sympathēsai (συμπαθῆσαι) means to suffer alongside. Jesus does not observe our pain from a distance; He participates in it. The cross becomes the defining lens through which all suffering is understood. It tells us that God is not indifferent to human sorrow. He has entered it fully, borne it completely, and redeemed it ultimately.
This invites a question that many of us quietly carry: what do we do with the wounds we have never fully acknowledged? There are sorrows we have buried, losses we have never grieved, and questions we have never voiced. Yet healing begins not with understanding, but with surrender. To “cast our burdens” upon the Lord is not merely a poetic phrase—it is an intentional act of trust. It is choosing to believe that God can handle what we have been trying to carry alone.
And as we do, something remarkable happens. The comfort we receive does not remain with us; it flows through us. We begin to recognize pain in others with a clarity we did not have before. We speak less, but we understand more. We offer presence instead of prescriptions. In this way, our suffering becomes a bridge rather than a barrier.
On Second Thought
It is a difficult truth to accept that the very wounds we often wish God would remove may be the very places He chooses to work most deeply. We tend to think of comfort as the absence of pain, yet Scripture presents it as the presence of God within pain. That distinction changes everything. What if the goal is not to escape suffering, but to encounter God within it? What if the comfort we seek is not found in resolution, but in relationship?
There is a paradox here that challenges our natural instincts. We want to be healed so we can move on, yet God often heals us in a way that keeps us connected—to Him and to others. The scars remain, not as reminders of defeat, but as testimonies of grace. They become the language through which we minister to others. Without them, our words may be accurate, but they lack depth. With them, even our silence carries meaning.
Consider this: the servant girl in Naaman’s household did not escape her circumstances before she became a vessel of compassion. Her ability to comfort did not come after her suffering ended, but while she was still in it. This suggests that God’s work in us is not dependent on our circumstances changing, but on our hearts being shaped. It is not the removal of pain that prepares us to help others—it is the redemption of it.
So perhaps the question is not, “Why is this happening to me?” but “How is God preparing me through this?” That shift does not eliminate the struggle, but it reorients it. It allows us to see our lives not as isolated events, but as part of a larger narrative of grace. And in that narrative, even our suffering has purpose.
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