What are God's Promises during times of suffering?

I’ve heard countless sermons say that God promises peace, strength, and even purpose in pain… but when you’re actually going through something hard, those ideas can feel super distant or confusing. I’ve read verses about God being near to the brokenhearted and working all things for good, but I still wrestle with what that really looks like in real life.

So I’m curious, what do you believe God actually promises us during suffering?

Not just general encouragement that everything works out, but specific things we can hold onto when life feels like it’s drowning you. I’d really appreciate hearing how others understand this, especially if you’ve walked through difficult seasons yourself.

It’s not an instant boom snap of the finger relief, it’s more of a steady guiding hand, a supporting shoulder to lean on.
You still go through the pain, the heart break, the what ifs and what could I have dones, but God is there, and he may show His support in small or large ways, sending someone to listen, providing other things to help clear your mind.
I have gone through a lot, and currently am going through some things, including a broken heart, but each day as I grow in my faith and give over to Him and His will, and pour out my soul to Him in confidence, as well as those willing to listen, the burden gets lighter, He carries more for me every day, and I am indeed thankful for that. He is there, and He is love.

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After the passing of my dear wife, I have walked through the valley, not the mountaintop.

“Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death” (Psalms 23:4); “I am bowed down greatly; I go mourning all the day long”

(Psalms 38:6); yet I remember, “The LORD is near unto them that are of a broken heart”

(Psalms 34:18), and “Weeping may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning” (Psalms 30:5).

J.

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@shalom Thanks for posting that for me. In the past 9 days, my bedding was stolen, so I spent 3 days sleeping on bare concrete while fighting COVID. A guard put a hit out on me. I was completely cut off from all my spiritual and emotional support. My brother was in the hospital, my best friend was ejected from his house by a drug-fueled spouse, and I was locked down for 5 days in my cell because the jail had set up some gang fights. Oh, I got notified that the thieves who put me in here are trying to take my parental rights by force. Of course, let us not forget that it was once again ruled I have no rights to church counsel, not that a single church here would care.

My prayers turned to cries and tears, and no scripture could hold me aloft. Here is the takeaway from my week in hell:

  1. Without Jesus, we are hilariously outgunned and have no strength on our own.
  2. We need the body of Christ because it lifts us up.
  3. When you serve and act out His will, you may just be someone’s only proof that God is there.

I am still in hell week and still learning. I’ll update you.

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He promises to be near, whether we’re aware of it or not. He sees it all. Everything we’re going through, how we are feeling, what our enemies are doing and feeling. All of it. He is present and knows the full situation. Even when there’s no evidence of Him whatsoever, we can count on that.

“Vengeance is mine, says the Lord. I will repay.” At some point; either soon or in the future, all will be made right. The righteous Judge will work it out and if we’ve been harmed, He will vindicate us. I don’t have to plot and plan. I can trust in my God for total justice.

God promises to work to the good to those who love Him and are called according to His purpose. Romans 8:28. What is the good? Is it a happy life? Material possessions? Health? Was the gruesome death of the disciples good? The evidence I see around me with other Christians doesn’t line up with that. God’s good is not what we may think of as good.
There’s is always something to learn about myself in hardship. Paul was able to say that he learned to be content in all circumstances and those circumstances were not our good. When I’m going through a trial I need to seek out what’s good. What is God showing me? What am I seeing in my character? If I can see that, it’s good.

What about the suffering of our Lord? He had a turbulent ministry cumulating in a gruesome death. All through it, He relied on His Father in prayer and obedience and He showed His disciples what that looked like in a life lived.

We have His presence. We have His example. We know He will work it out justly and we have these experiences to learn how to be content with what we go through.

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“One of the aims of God in the suffering of the saints is to enlarge their capacity to enjoy his glory both here and in the age to come.” – John Piper, Suffering and the Sovereignty of God

Among the manifold effects of sin on humanity, is that in our finite and fallen state it is our nature to internalize suffering and make it all about us and what we’re “going through”. Even as followers of Christ, seldom, if ever, is our initial response to suffering to reign in our self-centeredness long enough to prayerfully consider what is God’s purpose in allowing our suffering in the first place. To put it differently, what we often lose sight of when it comes to suffering is perspective. Which is to say, we fail to contemplate just who and what it is we are choosing to believe in those moments when difficulty and adversity arise in our life (Eccl. 7:14).

The significance of having a biblical perspective of suffering is highlighted in this doctrinally robust statement from the apostle Paul in Phil. 1:29, “For to you it has been granted for Christ’s sake, not only to believe in Him, but also to suffer for His sake.”

In Scripture, the word ‘suffer’ has both positive and negative connotations (though mostly negative). One positive example would be Matt. 19:14 (KJV) where, in Christ’s exhortation to, “Suffer [the] little children, and forbid them not, to come unto Me; for such is the kingdom of heaven”, the Greek verb “suffer” is the word aphiēmi, meaning to send forth, to permit, or to allow. However, in Phil. 1:29, the word “suffer” is used in a negative context. It is the Greek word paschō, which denotes to undergo, to be adversely impacted by a situation or circumstance, or to find oneself in a dire, distressing, or grievous plight.

In Phil. 1:29a, the pronoun “you” is referring to Christians. Every Christian. It is a personal pronoun, meaning the text is to be understood as if Paul were speaking to each of us individually or one-on-one. What Paul was saying to the Philippian believers – and to you today – is that suffering will be such a constant and ever-present reality in the life of the follower of Christ, it is as if you could replace the word “you” in that verse with your own name.

“Why do you complain against Him that He does not give an account of all His doings?” – Job 33:13 (NASB)

One of the primary reasons you and I struggle to consistently have a biblical perspective of suffering, is we are ignorant of the fact that suffering is a gift to us from God. That’s right – a gift – which is exactly what the word “granted” (Phil. 1:29) implies.

Suffering, and its consequent physical, emotional, financial, and psychological effects tend to blind us to the reality that situations of adversity have been deliberately and purposefully bestowed to us by a loving and gracious heavenly Father who is sovereign over such things. This kind of teleological myopia is exhibited chiefly in our tendency to try to define for God how His divine beneficence should manifest itself in our life. It is this self-focused thinking that gives rise to such speculative and doubt-inducing questions as, “If God truly loved me/you/them/us, then, why did He allow this/that to happen to me/you/them/us?”

And therein lies the danger.

It is when we try to fit an autonomous, self-governing, and self-determining God into a behavioral box of our own making that we find it difficult to conceive of how He could possibly view having cancer, a miscarriage (or several), HIV/AIDS, being the victim of sexual abuse, or dealing with the adulterous betrayal of a spouse as being spiritually redemptive in any way, shape, or form. And yet, God has promised that such experiences indeed are to our benefit, as He uses them to shape and mold us into the image of His Son (Rom. 8:28-29; Heb. 5:8). As Christian author and biblical counselor Paul David Tripp writes in Suffering: Gospel Hope When Life Doesn’t Make Sense,

Nevertheless, as followers of Christ we must never be so presumptuous of God’s goodness that we bring upon ourselves any undue suffering that is the result of our willful and volitional disobedience to God. To do so is not suffering, but is merely reaping the consequences of our sin (Prov. 5:22; Rom. 6:23a; Gal. 6:7). It is in light of this truth that we would do well to carefully consider the words of the apostle Peter, who exhorts us to, “Make sure that none of you suffers as a murderer, or thief, or evildoer, or a troublesome meddler; but if anyone suffers as a Christian, he is not to be ashamed, but is to glorify God in this name (1 Pet. 4:15).”

“Whenever God brings us through a severe trial, it will reveal to us either the strength or weakness of our faith and the faithfulness of God.” – John MacArthur, The Power of Suffering: Strengthening Your Faith In The Refiner’s Fire

In our suffering, we must keep in mind that God is not like us (Ps. 50:21). He is not good only situationally or coincidentally, as you and I are, but is good perfectly and eternally because, being good by nature, His nature is unchangeable (Mal. 3:6a; Heb. 13:8).

Though your trials may distress you, they are not designed to punish you (2 Cor. 4:8-10). God has designed your suffering to stretch you, to sanctify you, to test you – to prove to you that your faith in this loving, merciful, and all-wise God is genuine – just as He does with every person who has genuinely placed their faith in Him (Gen. 22:12; Deut. 8:2; Rom. 10:9-10; Heb. 12:6; Jas. 1:3-4; 1 Pet. 5:9).
Darrell

J.

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There’s a lot of depth in what you shared.

At the same time, I think when people are in the middle of suffering, it can be hard to see it as anything meaningful or purposeful in that moment. Sometimes it just feels painful and confusing.

What has helped me is holding onto smaller promises, like not being alone in it, even if I don’t understand it yet. That part feels a bit more reachable when things are heavy.

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2 Timothy 3:12
“Yea, and all that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution.”

I believe all who desire to live godly in Christ will face trials, hardships, testing, and persecution. Sister, follow what the Holy Spirit lays on your heart, obey Christ, deny yourself, and continue steadfastly after Him. There is nothing wrong in what you are doing.

J.

I think one of the hardest parts is that the promises don’t always look the way we expect them to.

For me, it hasn’t been about things getting fixed quickly, but more about not being completely alone in it. Sometimes it shows up as just enough strength for the next step, not the whole path.

Verses about God being near or giving peace used to feel very abstract to me, but in harder seasons they started to feel more like something quiet and steady rather than something dramatic.

So maybe the promise isn’t that suffering goes away, but that we’re not left to carry it by ourselves.

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Suffering is a defining mark of those who truly belong to Christ Jesus. The Messiah suffered, the prophets suffered, and the apostles suffered. Scripture is explicit:

2 Timothy 3:12
“Yea, and all that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution.”

1 Peter 2:21
“For even hereunto were ye called: because Christ also suffered for us, leaving us an example, that ye should follow his steps:”

Hebrews 11:36–38
“And others had trial of cruel mockings and scourgings, yea, moreover of bonds and imprisonment:
They were stoned, they were sawn asunder, were tempted, were slain with the sword: they wandered about in sheepskins and goatskins; being destitute, afflicted, tormented;
(Of whom the world was not worthy:) they wandered in deserts, and in mountains, and in dens and caves of the earth.”

Acts 14:22
“Confirming the souls of the disciples, and exhorting them to continue in the faith, and that we must through much tribulation enter into the kingdom of God.”

So everything depends on how suffering is defined biblically, and why it is necessary in the life of a believer.

As an observation, you seem to move from place to place without really working carefully with the Scriptures themselves.

J.