The dark night of the soul often comes upon us suddenly and without advance
warning. This night can end in one of two ways. If we understand
what God's basic will is and we relinquish ourselves to Him, we can experience
the glorious presence of the Lord even in the midst of our trial.
If, however, we are confused about what the dark night is, why God allows it
and how we are to respond to it, then doubt, unbelief, hardness and a
falling away from the faith can result.
When we allow even a little bit of unbelief, this doubt can turn
into bitterness and resentment that can harden us for the rest of our lives, and
we can end up closing ourselves off from the only Source of Life there is.
Unless we can continually look at our night seasons through God's eyes and
remember His goals and His purposes, we may slide into the darkness and never
come out.
I've been at this point several times over the last ten years, and I know how
hard it is emotionally to pull yourself up and cry, "No matter what is going on
in my life, I choose to trust and believe in You, God." (Job 13:15) The
bottom line is: there is no other choice! God is the only answer
unless, of course, we want to end up shipwrecked, as expressed
above.
Last month we began a series of articles entitled, "Passing
Through the Night" - what we are to do in order to get through our
night seasons. We shared that whether we advance, withdraw or simply
stay put is determined by our responses in our times of crisis. We
listed the actions we must take in order to get through our night and explored
how we must stand still, rest in His promises and stop asking, "Why?"
In this article we want to continue our examination by studying how we
cease doubting and fighting, and how we guard against discouragement. In
the next article, we will conclude our survey by examining how we stop blaming
others, put on the whole armor of God and praise Him in all things.
Cease Doubting
Doubt in God's faithfulness and His Love during our dark night affects
everything we do. Doubt quenches God's Spirit and brings us down faster
than anything else. It can devastate and paralyze us simply because it
affects every choice we make.
Satan, as you are well aware, will do anything he can to get us to doubt
God's faithfulness. He begins by inserting suggestions like, "See, you're
not special to God anymore." "He doesn't care about you." "Who do
you think you are to...!" Of course, when you are going through a night season,
everything you feel and see at this time "validates" Satan's poisonous
words. The enemy loves to agitate us, unquiet us and make things miserable
and tormenting for us. Then, he moves in for the kill and begins to twist
Scripture to confirm the doubts he is inflicting us with.
An Example: Shar
A dear friend of mine lost her oldest son last year in a horrible automobile
accident. He was only 20 and he loved the Lord with all his heart.
My friend had been a Christian for years, had taught numerous Bible studies, and
had exhorted many others to know Christ. But losing her son absolutely
crushed her. She could not understand how a loving God would allow this
horrible loss to happen to someone who loved Him so much.
The more
she questioned God, the more doubt and unbelief grew in her soul. Finally,
she found herself at the lowest point in her walk with God. When she
prayed, she couldn't hear His voice. It seemed as if He had covered
Himself with a cloud, abandoning her in her deepest need. When she read
the Bible, the enemy twisted its meaning to convey something totally opposite
from what was intended.
Faith reads the word accurately; whereas, doubt allows Satan to give it a
whole other meaning. For example: When my friend read in
Hebrews about our need to be disciplined by suffering, because of her doubt she
thought it said that God took away her son to discipline her, which, of course,
devastated her. And since she had no idea why she was being
disciplined, she simply let go of God's hand. Her painful experience
demonstrates that when our hearts and our spirits are covered by doubt and
unbelief, we give the enemy huge holes and entrances into our soul.
My friend became so depressed that she wanted to die. She no longer
cared about anything or anyone. When we cut our "life line," our lives
become absolutely meaningless. The Lord in His Love, however, arranged
some precious circumstances to show Shar how much He did care for her
and to what extremes He would go to communicate that Love to her. He sent a
woman from the other side of the country at the precise time and in the precise
way, to let her know that she was loved. Shar is slowly, once again,
beginning to make faith choices, acknowledging her doubt and unbelief and giving
it to Him. These faith choices bar Satan's attacks and allow God to, once
again, manifest Himself to her, minister to her and comfort her with His
Love.
Jesus is our example and we must remember what He did on the cross. In
spite of all that was going on with Him physically, He kept turning his head
towards God; kept crying out to Him; kept abandoning Himself to Him; and kept
praying. Jesus never once gave up faith in His Father. Even though
He felt as if His Father had abandoned Him, He continued to allow the Holy
Spirit to minister to Him and to comfort Him. Even though He "felt" very
little help from His Father at that time, He still abandoned Himself to Him and
cried, "Father, into Thy hands I commend my spirit." (Luke 23:46)
We must do the same thing. Even though we feel and experience very
little help from our Father in our night seasons, we must entrust our souls into
His hands. Whether we sink or swim, we must never let anything, anyone, or
any situation drive us away from holding on to God. Only He can show us
the way. If we doubt Him, we will never make it through.
Remember, when doubt becomes a part of our lives, then our own ideas, our own
intuitions, our own work and our own inferences can also become sources of
delusion.
If you are in the middle of a very difficult situation now, and doubt has
already crept into your thinking, don't wait another moment. Turn to the
Lord right now. Acknowledge your real feelings, confess and repent of
them, and then make the appropriate faith choices to give your unbelief and
doubt over to Him. There truly is nowhere else you can go for help - to be
healed, to be freed - but to God Himself, as Jesus taught us. And
until you do, that doubt and unbelief will affect everything you think, say and
do.
Sources of Doubt
Let's take a moment to point out the three primary sources of doubt,
so we don't fall into the trap that Shar did and end up quenching God's
Spirit.
First of all, doubt comes to us through the strategies of Satan and his
demonic horde. The devil has been active from the beginning of the
world. He won his first victory when he convinced Eve to doubt in the
goodness of God. Even though insinuating doubt has been Satan's best
strategy since the Garden of Eden, human beings are still falling for it
today! "Yea, hath God said...?" (Genesis 3:1)
By destroying our trust in God's faithfulness, he devours our commitment to
God. And when we surrender to doubt, we quickly become a backslidden
statistic, wide open to deception.
We must be diligent to guard ourselves against such thoughts as: "God doesn't
love me"... "He doesn't care"... "He's not faithful"... "His promises are not
true"... "God is mad at me"... "Others have fallen before me, how am I supposed
to make it through?"
Satan not only deceives us through our own questioning minds and through
careless remarks of others, but also through our misunderstood circumstances, as
in Shar's case. He is our mortal enemy, and when we are emotionally weak,
physically exhausted, mentally confused and spiritually unprepared, he closes in
for the kill. Thus, he thrives in our "night seasons."
A second source of doubt comes from dwelling in a world saturated with
human wisdom. Worldly values are often the direct opposite of godly
values and human wisdom is often the opposite of the wisdom of God. For
instance, many Americans believe in evolution simply because it's what they were
taught in school and yet, this popular theory is in direct conflict with the
truth of creation. Worldly wisdom can easily infect every aspect of our
lives, and the only way to survive this contamination is to constantly renew our
minds with the truth of God's Word.
A third source of doubt comes from our own spiritual immaturity and our
own double-mindedness. The Greek root word for doubleminded is
psyche, which literally means double-souled. It means two lives
are being lived. God's Life is still resident in our hearts, but
because we have emotionally chosen to follow our own doubt and unbelief instead
of what God has told us, self-life has taken over our souls.
Double-mindedness is lethally dangerous, because it leaves us wide open for
greater deception, which can ultimately lead to more doubt. When we
blindly follow Satan by being doubleminded, we will eventually lose our faith in
God and our hope in His promises.
Don't ask God why you have to go through this fire. This is not a time
to speak to Him, but simply a time to humble ourselves before Him and suffer
politely. Just know that what God is doing in you and through you is both
very important and essential for your growth.
It's also important not to run to a friend or to the phone first, but choose,
instead, to be alone with the Lord. Reaffirm to Him that all that matters
to you is knowing and loving Him. Quote Psalm 73:25 to Him, "Whom do I
have but You?" Say in faith, as Job did, "For I know that my redeemer
liveth and...in my flesh, shall I see Him." (Job 19:26)
Refrain from any emotional or intellectual security of knowing, understanding
and being right. One single attachment is enough to prevent you from
attaining the union that God so desires. Be patient, believe in Him and
listen for His voice. He knows about your every thought, emotion and
desire.
The best thing you can do is to accept the trial graciously and stand back
and see what God does. Surrender yourself to the suffering. Don't
look for a way out. Stay in the trial if that's God's will and be willing
to die to your "self." Be willing to be stripped naked and obliterated if
that is what He requires.
Cease Fighting
There is an instinctive rebellion in us against what is happening. It's
called "survival." We must stop all efforts to deliver ourselves and learn
to lean on His breast. Because we feel what is happening is not
deserved, not warranted and not fair, this is the time we often take matters
into our own hands by "lighting our own fires." This resistance we
put up without realizing it, is the source of much of our trouble and as Isaiah
50:10 tells us, if we do this, "we will lie down in sorrow and be
destroyed."
The less we struggle, the less it will hurt. We need to cease trying to
figure out what God is up to and simply wait for Him to act. Cry out to
Him, "Lord, I give up. I can't fight. I confess my self-pity, my
rebellion. It's all yours. I'm simply going to trust You."
Remember, the battle is not ours, but the Lord's. He has not forgotten
us. He will always be faithful. Thus, we must stop acting as if He
has forgotten all about us and abandoned us.
We mustn't pray for
relief from the trial, but rather pray for strength to endure it with courage,
humility and love, and to be changed by it. We won't be able to weather
the storms unless we are willing to persevere and overcome. Romans 5:3
tells us that tribulation brings about patience, and patience, if we
allow it to, will bring about hope.
Much of our trouble springs from our not wanting to give up our attachments,
our support systems and everything else we rely upon. The more we fight to
save these things, however, the sharper our trials will become. If we can
willingly surrender ourselves to what God is doing in our lives and permit the
crucifying process to go unheeded, then the blows will be much softer and the
process will go a lot faster. It is God who holds us fast to the
cross and it is God who will loose us from that cross when He sees
fit. No one can change His plans. We must simply seek His
strength to endure.
Let's keep our eyes upon Him and run towards
Him like that eagle. Even if we don't see Him or feel Him or
understand His ways, He promises us that the darkness will eventually shrivel
away and the light will begin to shine. "Unto the upright there ariseth
light in the darkness...." (Psalm 112:4)
All the trials and tribulations God has allowed are simply a part of the
preparation process that He is implementing in each of our lives. These
night seasons are a necessary part of learning to love and learning to know
God intimately.
Guard Against Discouragement
As we read the words of David in Psalm 38, we find this godly, righteous man
discouraged and at the end of himself. Listen:
I am troubled; I am bowed down greatly; I go mourning all the day
long...I am feeble and sore broken: I have roared by reason of the disquietness
of my heart...My heart panteth, my strength faileth me: as for the light of mine
eyes, it also is gone from me...I, as a deaf man, heard not; and I was as a dumb
man that openeth not his mouth. Thus I was as a man that heareth not, and
in whose mouth are no reproofs. -Psalm 38:6, 8, 10, 13-14
One of the emotions I struggled with the most in my own night season was
discouragement. Nothing seemed to bring me down faster than allowing
disappointment and discouragement into my soul.
When we become discouraged and cling to our anxieties, our fears and our
self-pity, it not only strengthens them, it also impedes what God wants to
do.
We must be careful not to fall into the mode of self-pity or wanting sympathy
from others. Be assured, you won't get it. Besides, it does no good
anyway - we only end up deeper in the pit than when we started. Our eyes
cannot be on anyone or anything but God Himself. His approval and His
support is all we need.
Our greatest failure during this time is in allowing our interior agitation
and depression to become exaggerated. If we allow our negative thoughts to
go unchecked, our agitation and our depression will not only quench God's Spirit
and deprive us of hearing God's voice, but it will also become an obstacle to
our union with Him.
Thus, it's imperative that we learn how to "see" in the
darkness. We need to see and to understand not so much what God is
doing, but rather what He desires of us. We must
continue to walk abandoned to His will and wait upon Him without anxiety and
without hunger for any experience. Our dependence must rest completely in
His Love and faithfulness so that, no matter what events are transpiring in our
lives, our spirit and our inner man remain at rest.
This is one of the main reasons for our night seasons - God wants our spirit
to be strengthened, so that what happens to us on the outside (in our soul),
does not determine our composure on the inside.
We are troubled on every side, yet not distressed; we are perplexed, but
not in despair; Persecuted, but not forsaken; cast down, but not destroyed;
Always bearing about in [our] body the dying of the Lord Jesus, that the life
also of Jesus might be made manifest in our body. -2 Corinthians 4:8-10
* * *
This series has been excerpted from Chuck and Nancy Missler's
Faith in the Night Seasons.