3 Truths About The Dark Night of The Soul' Leadership Journal
3 Truths About The Dark Night of The Soul' Leadership Journal
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As a pastor and therapist, I often encounter people whose lives have been invaded by
despair. Often they approach me, not quite sure what's going on. "Maybe I'm going crazy. Or
perhaps I'm just depressed. Can you help?" Here are three ways Ive found to understand
these dark nights of the soul.
St. John of the Cross would say no, and I'd agree. Most psychological issues parallel real
spiritual issues. What we call difficulty or failure, or even a "psychological issue," can
occasion moments of spiritual awakening. I suspect St. John would see this pastor's difficulty
with prayer, his lack of passion, and even his pull toward lust as signs of the dark night. The
purpose of the dark night, of course, is to strip us of our futile attempts to find God on our
own terms and awaken us to a much simpler desire for intimacy with God. I find in my work
that this is exactly what people want. Time and again, pastors tell me that they'd just like to
know God, more purely, more simply, more deeply.
The great nineteenth century preacher Charles Spurgeon suffered from acute depression.
Often he was bedridden and unable to preach, sometimes as much as twice a month.
Nowadays, we may have little compassion for a pastor who battled such frequent and
debilitating bouts of depression. However, Jesus invites the "weary and heavy laden" to find
rest in him. That goes for pastors, too.
Today, these emotional struggles find psychological validation, and we ought to avail
ourselves of therapy, exercise, support groups, and medication when we need it. There is no
shame in finding help in any of these things.
But also consider this moment to be an opportunity to see what Jesus may be up to in your
life, or in the lives of those you counsel. What you might find is that you're being invited into
the glorious purging of the dark night, where the old self and its old loves are shed and
replaced by a new and deeper love for Jesus, for others, and even for youa beloved son or
daughter of a heavenly Father who longs to see you whole.
Chuck DeGroat teaches pastoral care and counseling at Western Theological Seminary in
Holland, Michigan. Reprinted by permission from The Ministry Essentials Bible
(Hendrickson, 2014).
Copyright 2015 by the author or Christianity Today/Leadership Journal.
Click here for reprint information on Leadership Journal.
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