Can you name who is the most depressed person in the Bible? Job sitting on his 
dung-heap scraping his sores with a potsherd? Or Jeremiah weeping while he 
writes his Lamentations, or surely Elijah in his cave at Horeb, praying the 
Lord to let him die? But no, there's Another--Jesus Himself hanging on His 
cross in the darkness crying out, "My God, why have You forsaken Me?" He is the 
Prince of depressed people.
If you are tempted by despair--everything has gone wrong, disappointments and 
misfortunes seem to shout in your ears that God has forgotten you, and to top 
it all off you are keenly aware of your own sinfulness--please remember Jesus. 
It would not be fair for you at last to "sit down with [Him] in [His] throne" 
(as He promises in Revelation 3:21) unless you have at least tasted a little 
what He went through. Some "fellowship with Him in His sufferings" (see Phil. 
3:10) is a great blessing to you in the end.

If we remember Jesus, we can see how depression is not necessarily sin, even if 
some well-meaning people rub that in to make your sufferings worse (Job had his 
three "friends," remember).

Step #1 of course is to remember and believe God's New Covenant promises to 
Abraham (Gen. 12:2, 3) and see yourself as a "child of Abraham" (Gal. 3:29). 
But Step #2 is important: learning how to believe those promises. Perhaps (in 
fact, quite likely) you are unwittingly hindering your ability to believe. 
Many, when they get depressed, gorge on food--the worst thing they can do.

Step #3 is to fast for a while; yes, eat nothing. Give your stomach a rest; let 
your mind be cleared so you can hear the "still small voice" Elijah had to 
listen for (1 Kings 19:12).

Step #4 may be to do something that gets your blood pumping (remember the 
depressed man who wanted to die but didn't want to leave his family a mess to 
clean up after his suicide, so he got out and ran, thinking he could keel over 
in a convenient heart attack; and lo, his depression was gone!).

Step #5 can be a good night's sleep (without drugs if possible).

And best of all, #6, a good long quiet visit alone with that Prince of 
sufferers--all TV, cell phones, iPods turned off. And when you pray, step #7, 
choose even if you don't feel like it, to believe His promises.

--Robert J. Wieland

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