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Depression
Speaker: Dr. Harold J. Sala
Series: Guidelines For Living
“You have taken my companions and loved ones from me; the
darkness is my closest friend.” Psalm 88:18
The dark days of
December can be a catalyst which brings to the surface all the negative
thoughts that have brewed in the kettle of physical weariness and despondency.
I couldn’t help
thinking of that when I encountered three individuals who struggled with the
demon of depression at the same time.
One was a respected
musician and Christian leader, the composer of many hymns and songs with a list
of theatrical credits almost as long as he was old who barricaded himself in
his church office during Christmas week and ended his life with a gunshot to
the head.
The same week a
renowned pediatric heart surgeon, one of the finest in the world, unable to
climb out of the pit of depression, took his life.
This brilliantly
gifted doctor performed 830 operations on children in 18 months with a 2%
mortality rate. He had been featured on television documentaries and was worshipped
by his patients. He was 45.
The third in this
dark trilogy is a friend of many years, also a doctor, a cardiologist who has
spent her life helping people along with her husband, a surgeon. Both served as
medical missionaries.
The third is
recovering, but depression for the first two was fatal.
Whenever the world,
to say nothing of our families and close friends, is deprived of the presence
of so great an individual it is a massive collective loss.
We pass laws to
protect people. We monitor our water, our food, and our borders to insure
safety, but laws or boundaries can’t protect us from the darkness demon of
depression.
Elderly people
whose health has failed and who have little to look forward to are classic
sufferers with depression, but today it is not only the elderly but those in
the middle years with success and significance.
Why does this
happen? And what can be done to prevent it? No one could answer those questions
in two minutes.
Depression is
complex. It is not a lack of spirituality, or a deficiency in comprehending
God’s plan or purpose for our lives.
Christians as well
as non-believers suffer, though I am confident that there are resources which
can help the believer survive whereas others give up entirely on life.
Every person is a
composite of the emotional, the physical, and the spiritual.
There are times
when depression is the result of a chemical imbalance in the brain — something
a person is no more responsible for than are those of us who wear glasses or
have corrective surgery because a heart valve isn’t working properly.
But depression
affects your thinking as you begin to doubt what you know to be true, and see
darkness rather than light, and live in a funk that seems to press upon you.
Telling someone to “snap
out of it” is as senseless as telling a drowning individual to swim.
I’m thinking of the woman who poured out her heart, tears
streaming down her face, as she said, “God knows I would snap out of it if I
only knew how!”
Surrounding an
individual who is encountering depression with understanding, compassion, and
strength is a beginning in helping build fences that save lives and help
restore health and sanity.
Ignoring those who
hurt or trivializing the problem only makes it worse.
God is not
indifferent to those who suffer, whether it is a brilliant surgeon, a gifted
teacher or intellectual, or a gray-haired grandfather who has worked a steady
job over the years, whose health has failed and whose mental equilibrium has
gone on strike.
There is both help
and hope for the one who is depressed. While the road back may be painful and
long, there is a way out of the darkness.
Resource reading:
Job 17
DR.
HAROLD J. SALA
Founder
& Chairman of the Board
Speaker,
author and Bible teacher, Dr. Harold Sala founded Guidelines in 1963.
Pioneering the five-minute commentary in Christian radio, Dr. Sala’s daily
"Guidelines for Living" is heard the world over in a variety of
languages. Sala, who holds a Ph.D. in biblical text, has authored over 60 books
published in19 languages. He speaks and teaches frequently at conferences,
seminars, and churches worldwide. Residing in Mission Viejo, California, Harold
has been married to Darlene for nearly wonderful 60 years.
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