Psalm 73: 26: “My flesh and my heart may fail,
but God is the strength of my heart and my portion forever.”
“My flesh and my heart may fail" defines depression, meaning
unhappiness, sadness, hopelessness and misery. There are three parts to this
little phrase.
"My flesh" – there is a physical component to despondency. The
body weakens, there are aches, pains, fatigue and eventually the risk of
serious illness as a result of constant misery – ulcers, strokes, heart decease
– and there always is exhaustion.
Secondly, "and my heart" - there is an
emotional-spiritual dimension to despondency. We feel discouraged, depressed,
gloomy and burned out.
Thirdly, there is this word,
"fail." It means to come to
your wits end and be depleted of resources.
Is it a sin to experience despondency?
Under sad and hopeless
circumstances it is no sin to feel despondent. Many of the exemplary believers
in the Scriptures experienced deep and dark depression and even hopelessness.
Jesus was overwhelmed with sorrow in Gethsemane.
What is wrong is to yield
to despondency, to refuse to fight it and to think that God cannot reach
you in that dark space – or to believe that God cannot change your broken heart
into a source of gladness and joy!
The most important 2 words
in this verse are: "But God...Psalm
73:26 contains this truth: "My flesh
and my heart may fail": And then comes the counter attack: “but God.”
“But God”. God is the
strength of my life.
God is my portion forever!
Depression can be the result
of many circumstances - but faith comes
from one place only. It comes from the willingness to say: “but God.”
But God can fill me with gladness again.
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