There are far too many voices out there clamoring for our attention, likes, clicks, shares, and reposts. Not every voice you hear is the voice of wisdom or discernment. It’s important that you carefully consider what you hear and believe. Scripture is God’s own voice, and it is a tried and trusted guide as we walk through different seasons in life. There are many Bible verses for mourning that you can turn to when you’re dealing with loss.

The Place for Mourning in Our Lives

Toxic positivity is something to be wary of. It’s one thing to be upbeat during a crisis, but a person who displays toxic positivity will go so far as to deny that the crisis exists or that emotions such as sadness, depression, hopelessness, feeling lost, and grieving have a place in life. Instead of acknowledging that life can be hard and bewildering, they forge ahead with a practiced obliviousness to these realities.

Toxic positivity can be a challenge for believers. A believer is supposed to have faith, joy, and peace. However, this only shows part of the picture in Scripture. Both the New and Old Testaments show believers and faithful people mourning or lamenting aloud to God about their sense of loss. They express a range of emotions, from joy and peace to sadness and confusion.

The shortest verse in Scripture reads, “Jesus wept.” (John 11:35, NIV) Jesus, who is God in the flesh, wept when His friend Lazarus died, even though He knew what He would do in raising him from the dead. Death is an enemy (1 Corinthians 15:26), corrupting God’s good creation, and the devastation that death causes is real; so real, in fact, that God stepped into His own creation to deal with it.

Believers mourn losses of various kinds because it’s not the way things were supposed to be. However, believers mourn with hope (1 Thessalonians 4:13-18, Romans 8:18-39), knowing that the Lord hears their groans, and He will, when all is said and done, wipe the tears from their eyes (Revelation 21:4). To mourn isn’t to deny God and His goodness; it’s recognizing hardship, while trusting in God to carry you through it.

Giving yourself room to mourn is an emotionally honest act. You’re allowing yourself to acknowledge that the reality of loss that you’re facing is real and perhaps overwhelming. This admission allows you to start healing. Additionally, when you lament, as Scripture teaches us to, it brings you into deeper dependence on the Lord, allowing Him to meet you in your places of lack and of brokenness.

When you allow yourself to mourn loss, it can invite others to come alongside you in support. This builds connection as you heal and process your loss. It also honors the loss you’ve experienced, particularly if it’s another person.

There are serious and significant downsides to not mourning loss. Suppressing your feelings of grief can result in delayed trauma and even emotional numbness. By withdrawing from others and not sharing your grief, you could harm relationships, and that includes your relationship with the Lord. Unexpressed sorrow can, in its own way, harden into a core of bitterness, resentment, and distance from the Lord.

Bible Verses for Mourning: A Thoughtful Reflection

Scripture models mourning for believers, showing us that it’s a part of life. The appropriate response to loss is to mourn, but believers have resources they can rely on to mourn with hope. That hope is not a vain hope, or wishful thinking. Rather, it’s rooted in the reality of who God is and how He has carried His people throughout the ages, meeting them in their places of need and in their grief.

Biblical wisdom shows the need to take time, create space, and have others alongside you as you grieve. Doing this helps you engage honestly in your relationships, feelings, and experiences. It honors the loss, and it opens the door for you to receive comfort, hope, peace, and healing.

There are Bible verses that provide insights into mourning. Some of the key passages include the following:

A Prayer Model

How long, O Lord? Will you forget me forever? How long will you hide your face from me? How long must I wrestle with my thoughts and day after day have sorrow in my heart?Psalm 13:1–2, NIV

This Psalm models a form of prayer known as lament. We lament to God, highlighting the unfairness of a situation, as well as our confusion and struggles with our reality.

A lament like the one above models a faithful response to pain. It doesn’t minimize the pain or the uncomfortable fact that David felt like God was far from him and seemed not to care. David felt the Lord’s abandonment in a time of crisis. Psalms like this one give believers the language to express their sorrow and turn their mourning into prayers directed toward God.

Life’s Seasons

There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under the heavens… a time to weep and a time to laugh, a time to mourn and a time to dance.Ecclesiastes 3:1,4, NIV

Life consists of different seasons, and in its many rhythms, mourning plays a part. Though death and loss of various kinds are not what God desires for us, it is nonetheless a part of this age and the current order of things.

Death is an enemy, and God has decisively dealt with death through Jesus Christ by His death and resurrection. However, until the world to come, where death shall be no more, grieving is a part of life here and now. We can mourn, and we ought to mourn when we experience loss.

Expressing Feelings

Jesus wept.John 11:35, NIV

This short verse came up earlier, and it is a powerful one. In it, we encounter the Lord Jesus grieving openly at Lazarus’ tomb. Expressing love and sorrow at the loss of a friend as Jesus did is something His followers can also do. Even though they had a difficult relationship, in 2 Samuel 18:33, David also wept over his rebellious son named Absalom.

God’s Compassion

Because of the Lord’s great love we are not consumed, for His compassions never fail. They are new every morning. – Lamentations 3:22–23, NIV

At the tail-end of Lamentations, which is a long expression of raw grief over Jerusalem’s destruction, the writer acknowledges God’s compassion even amid the destruction. This, admittedly, is not an easy thing to do.

These are just a few of the many Bible verses that address mourning.

Growing Through Your Mourning

The Bible is a source of wisdom that can help one navigate their loss. It permits you to mourn, and it sanctions different ways to mourn, including lament. Throughout the ages, believers have reflected on the words of Scripture, and they have shaped their own understandings of grief. Journeying with Scripture in your grief can be a vital part of your grief process, and you can also incorporate the insights of other believers.

It was likely the German theologian and pastor Dietrich Bonhoeffer observed: “Nothing can make up for the absence of someone whom we love…we must simply hold out and see it through.” While it may seem easier to try to fill the gaps left by grief and loss, it’s important to acknowledge the loss. Your faith doesn’t erase your loss or grief, but it can redeem it if you allow the Lord to guide you through it.

Instead of suppressing grief, it’s important to walk honestly through it. Using prayers of lament from Scripture, or other prayers you encounter in the Bible, can help you give voice to your sorrow when you don’t have words of your own. These words from other believers can be a help as you process your own grief.

Your grief can become a place of deep spiritual encounter with the Lord. As you walk with a support group or a Christian grief counselor, you can learn how to navigate your grief and rediscover your sense of meaning and purpose. Don’t walk alone in your grief. Speak to a qualified and trained grief counselor to help you as you rebuild your life after loss.

Photos:
“Prayer”, Courtesy of Getty Images, Unsplash.com, Unsplash+ License; “Burning Candle”, Courtesy of Jarl Schmidt, Unsplash.com, CC0 License; “Group Prayer”, Courtesy of The Good Funeral Guide, Unsplash.com, CC0 License

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