Dealing with Loss
This Sunday’s gospel is the “parable of the loss”; the lost sheep and the lost coin. In fact, this text is
one of sorrow and misery, recounting for us the pitiful state of a man and a woman who, having lost
what they once had, are looking …
What happens when the bottom falls out, when the only thing you really care about is taken away,
when, in Kipling’s words you “watch the things you gave your life to, broken”? Such loss, usually,
brings two important questions to mind: First, does God really care? Many of us begin to doubt
God’s goodness and love, and struggle believing in a God who would allow such suffering. Second,
is there any hope? Is God capable of bringing life and joy into my dead heart once again? Many
simply give up on God and retire from the human race….
All of us suffer loss to one degree or another. Some suffer more than others. Some handle it better
than others. But we all face our share of dark days and unexpected pain no matter how much we try
to protect ourselves. Suffering is part of the human condition and our fallen world. The rain falls
on the just and the unjust and so does suffering. Suffering just is. It lies outside the scope of
explanations, rationalizations, and justifications. The only thing that truly matters is receiving and
experiencing God in the midst of it. When the last thing is taken, when your deepest fear is
realized, will you turn towards God or away from Him?