The first time real pain comes into our lives in such a way that it challenges our strong, well-articulated faith structures, it’s quite traumatic for the responsible Christian—in large part because it is so unexpected. Up to this point in the spiritual life, we have felt somewhat in control and certain of so many things—our doctrines and theological positions, our understanding of God and where God may be found, our sense of ourselves and our place in the world, our feelings of being in control of our own destiny and, to some extent, the world around us.
But then pain brings us face-to-face with what spiritual masters call “the great unfixables of life”—the waywardness or loss of a child, a debilitating accident or illness, a spouse’s unfaithfulness, a divorce or some other type of relational breakdown, the loss of a job at mid-life, facing a lifetime of singleness or realizing that we can’t have children, an experience with war or violence, finding oneself utterly depleted and empty in God’s service, etc. These extraordinarily painful realities and the resulting awareness that we are not in control have the potential to rock our world at the most fundamental levels of our life and being. And believe it or not, this is a good thing!
If you ask most people to identify a time in their lives when they experienced the deepest levels of transformation and intimacy with God, they inevitably mention times of pain and difficulty. The reason for this is that the experience of pain contains within it so many spiritual invitations. For one thing, pain opens up an entirely different set of questions than we normally ponder—questions which, by their very nature, throw open a door or a window through which a fresh wind of the Spirit can blow. Pain also initiates spiritual possibilities for letting go of our attachments and moving into greater levels of freedom in God and deeper intimacy with God—which is, after all, what the spiritual journey is all about. But this is not automatic, nor can it be assumed. There are choices we must make to live into the promise of pain rather than to become completely mired in it.
01. Two Roads Diverge
There are two basic responses we can make to these painful experiences that come to us unbid-den. The first is avoidance, in which we sidestep the invitation to intimacy with God and transformation of character by trying to exert more control over the situation and/or by refusing to engage the deeper questions that such experiences surface in our lives. Most of us try avoidance for a while—at least at first—until we discover that it doesn’t work. You can only repress awareness and seek to avoid pain for so long without going crazy on some level. Those who continue to practice avoidance often cross over into some sort of pathology or dysfunction in order to maintain the illusion of control and to keep from taking personal responsibility for the journey to which pain is inviting them.
The other response, which is the more fruitful one, is to choose to walk into the wilderness of our pain and seek God there. Here we face the unsettling questions that emerge in the context of the great unfixables of our own life, we cling to the side of the mountain through the chaos those questions kick up, and we discover that real faith is not a thought or a theory or a doctrinal stance. Real faith is what’s still holding you after the crisis of “faith” has destroyed all your neat categories and systems of thought. We discover that real faith is what you know in the midst of not knowing. Or, as John of the Cross tells us, we are purged from all our habitual ways of knowing, all “particular knowledge,” and are left only with “vague, dark knowledge.” Eventually, he says, the intellect is illumined with a divine light that transcends the natural light of our knowing. When the time is ripe, we know just what we need to know, no more, no less, without knowing how we know.
Since pain is an inevitability of human existence in a fallen world, the question is not if we will encounter pain but when we will encounter pain. And the only question after that is whether or not we will say “yes” to the invitations contained in this part of the human journey. How can we “practice pain” in a way that is transforming rather than deforming?