Sermon Tone Analysis
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*When You are Troubled and Depressed*
*Psalm 77*
When you review the great names and personalities of the Scriptures, you become aware very quickly that almost all of them knew, at one time or another, great discouragement and deep depression.
Job is singled as a man of God, blameless and upright, whose staggering losses and long and painful illness brought him low: "My days…come to an end without hope…my eye will never again see anything good."
(Job 7:6, 7)
Moses is described as the meekest man on earth (Numbers 12:3) and rises as one of the greatest examples of an ordinary man who, submitted to God, became one of the greatest of all of the Old Testament characters.
He was faced with the arduous task of being the leader and general answer man for over a million Hebrew people, as well as the administrator of God’s Law—a role to which he was assigned by God, but one made more complicated by the tendency of the Israelites to gripe, doubt God, and attack Moses.
There came a time when Moses felt the crushing weight of this assignment and at last he cries out, "How can I bear [the] troubles, burdens, and disputes [of these people] by myself?" (Deut.
1:12)
Elijah, one of the greatest prophets of old, asked for his life to be taken.
David, in his efforts to hide sin, made journal entries that speak of the total loss of strength, the ebbing away of all that is worthwhile in life, and groaning all day long (Ps.
32:2ff.).
Jonah, the first foreign missionary, became deeply despondent when God did not destroy Nineveh.
Jeremiah was so profoundly sad that he is known to this day as the weeping prophet and confessed that he wished he’d never been born.
Then there’s Nehemiah and Ezekiel and Peter and more in the pages of Scripture.
The company of the depressed is a very noble company.
And whether we will admit it or not, all of us have been numbered among them.
One writer calls depression “the common cold of emotional disorders.”
All of our lips have spoken the words of discouragement and depression.
All of our hearts have felt it.
Every one of us has known, at one time or another, the slap of setback, the grief of loss, or the disheartening effects of stress.
To be human is to feel that numbing, exhausting, de-motivating fog of depression.
And then there is a kind of depression that is even more complicated because it’s triggers lie within in the form of chemical imbalance, which means we cannot escape the black hole without medical attention.
Some here know the private battle of a weary sadness that can take on many forms and show itself in many ways.
What adds to the burden of the depressed and despondent is the common and misguided notion that good Christians don’t get depressed.
Any hint of depression around the church, and clichés start to surface.
“You just need to have more faith” or “Remember: rejoice in the Lord always!”
Or sometimes it comes off as a pep talk: “Come on, get up and get moving!
Stop the pity party and pull yourself together!
What will people think of God if they see you like this?”
And of course that simply pushes the depressed deeper into the hole and teaches the discouraged that unless they want to hear the cheap clichés again, they had better fake happiness.
We’re not going to do that this morning.
Instead, I want to show you that God is closer than you think when you are troubled and depressed.
Psalm 77 is a intensely helpful passage when you’re in the pit.
Let me outline a few steps that give us a pattern we can follow to regain emotional equilibrium when life gets you down.
*1.
Send an SOS to God, v. 1-3, 7-9.*
Read vss.
1-3
Right away we hear the hopelessness.
Asaph draws pictures with words that depict desperation.
For instance, the word trouble in v. 2 describes a feeling of being confined, of the walls closing in.
Asaph felt like he was in a dark tunnel, only there is no light at the end.
When he says his soul refuses to be comforted, he means he tried to shake this off by the normal means we all resort to, but it wasn’t working.
He closes v. 3 saying that when he meditates—when he ponders the situation, trying to think his way through his problems—my spirit becomes weak.
His emotions sabotage reason.
The escape of sleep eluded him.
He stretched out his hand like a drowning man, longing to be saved.
Perhaps you can identify with Asaph’s feelings.
But don’t miss what his first response.
In his battle with depression, he doesn’t pretend.
He doesn’t bury his disillusionment.
He doesn’t fake happiness.
There’s no indication that he turned to food or shopping, alcohol or gambling, pornography or any number of other means people commonly use to cope.
Instead, he got honest with God.
Really honest!
I cry aloud to God, aloud to God.
He shouted to God.
He yelled his prayer.
In v. 3, he describes this further: I think of God; I groan--and the word groan can mean everything from a quiet noise to a raging explosion.
Down in v. 7-9, Asaph fills in some of the content of his prayers:
Read vss.
7-9
Asaph cycled through a wide and uncontrollable range of emotions, but he didn’t try to hide that from God.
He was real and reverent, honest yet humble.
He asked God the hard questions that depression raises.
And we find no indication that God is put off by that kind of unvarnished truthfulness.
My friend, let the wisdom of one in the hard fellowship of the depression come to you.
Don’t be ashamed to admit your inner turmoil, thinking that voicing your questions will offend God.
He really wants to hear from you, straight up.
In fact, the Bible promises that “the LORD is near to the brokenhearted and saves the crushed in spirit.”
(Ps.
34:18) Pour out your heart, loud or soft.
He’s waiting to hear from you.
*2.
Choose to Redirect Your Thoughts, v. 4-6, 10-12.*
During one of many sleepless nights, Asaph concludes that God was keeping him awake for a reason:
Read vss.
4-6
Asaph deliberately focused his thoughts on those past times when God seemed so near and he could push back the darkness with song.
Down in v. 10, he talks about how he did this: “Then I said, ‘I will appeal to this, to the years of the right hand of the Most High" (ESV) “I’m going to make force my thoughts out of this dungeon back to the years when I saw God doing great things.”
In v. 11, he writes, I will remember the LORD’S works; yes, I will remember Your ancient wonders.
I will reflect on all You have done and meditate on Your actions.
What an important step when you feel locked down by depression!
Oh how you need to regain perspective!
You know it to be true: when troubles crowd in and just getting up in the morning seems like a chore, where does your mind lean?
It leans toward how bad it is now, and it’s easy to conclude that the future will probably be too.
That’s when it’s important to call a mental time-out and take a long look in the rearview mirror at God’s past blessings.
Chip Ingram even suggests doing what he calls “the napkin exercise.”
“Whenever you feel yourself starting to go downhill, put a ballpoint pen in your pocket, go to a restaurant, get a soda, and pull out a napkin.
Begin to list all the specific blessings that happened that day…that week...that month…that year.
These are facts, not feelings.
Write down what God has done for you.
List the top ten answers to prayer in your life.
List five people who love you.
Write down the best things that have happened in your life.”
Don’t think this a pointless exercise.
Remembering is a biblical prescription that is central to worship and fuels your faith in God for the future.
When you mark God’s faithfulness in the past, you condition your weary heart with hope for tomorrow.
Send an SOS to God.
Choose to redirect your thoughts in order to stoke your hope for the future.
*3.
Magnify God to Diminish Your Problems, v. 13-20.*
There is something about worship that recalibrates the soul.
But worship is not the natural instinct of the depressed person.
When gloom closes in and all that once drove our life fades, we tend to want to pull the blanket over our head and bail out on God and everybody else.
But Asaph willed himself to come to worship.
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