Living With LossVoorbeeld

A child
Of all the types of human loss to have to endure, I think for me losing a child would be the bitterest. My mother-in-law’s sister died as a child in her father’s arms on Christmas Day. I don’t know how the dear man bore his grief.
King David’s infant child was seriously ill: “David pleaded with God for the child. He fasted and spent the nights lying in sackcloth on the ground. The elders of his household stood beside him to get him up from the ground, but he refused, and he would not eat any food with them” (2 Samuel 12:16,17). We know all the reasons why death has invaded our world and sometimes claims victims we think are far too young to die. We know about the wages of sin. It still hurts terribly.
David and Bathsheba probably thought about their dead child every day for the rest of their lives. But they had two important gifts from God to sustain them and keep them going: One is that those who die in the Lord will live in the Lord. Our loved ones, including children, are believers through the power of Word and sacrament, and connected to Christ by the power of Christ they are immortal. We will see them again. Second, God gave the grieving parents urgent and important work to do so that their lives wouldn’t just grind to a halt, paralyzed by their crushed hearts.
I think the best way to deal with emotional pain is to serve others.
Skrif
Aangaande hierdie leesplan

Unfortunately, loss is a part of our lives on earth. This reading plan offers comfort from God’s Word and the assurance that heaven awaits those who believe in Jesus.
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