Some young
children have trouble falling asleep at night. “While there
may be many reasons for this, my daughter explained one of them as I turned to
leave her bedroom one evening. ‘I’m afraid of the dark,’ she said. I tried to
relieve her fear, but I left a nightlight on so she could be sure that her room
was monster-free”.
“I didn’t think much more about my daughter’s fear until a few weeks
later when my husband went on an overnight business trip. After I settled into
bed, the dark seemed to press in around me. I heard a tiny noise and jumped up
to investigate. It turned out to be nothing, but I finally understood my
daughter’s fear when I experienced it myself”, said a friend.
Jesus
understands our fears and problems because He lived on the earth as a human and
endured the same types of trouble we face. “He was despised and rejected by
mankind, a man of suffering, and familiar with pain” (Isa. 53:3). When we
describe our struggles to Him, He doesn’t brush us aside, minimize our
feelings, or tell us to snap out of it—He relates to our distress. Somehow,
knowing that He understands can dispel the loneliness that often accompanies
suffering. In our darkest times, He is our light and our salvation.