• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Sermo Humilis

Humble Speech

  • Home
  • Topics
    • Just a Thought
    • Who we Are Instead
    • Life in Christendom
  • Series
    • Words that Matter
    • Rock of Ages
    • Let the Lady Speak
    • Life and Times of Jesus
    • Jesus Through all of Life
    • 8 Weeks Before Marriage
    • The Ten Commandments
  • About
  • Contact
  • Subscribe
  • Show Search
Hide Search
You are here: Home / Who we Are Instead / Down, But Not Out

Down, But Not Out

August 13, 2020 By David Trounce 2 Comments

Reading Time: 3 minutes
Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Down, But Not Out - Sermo Humilis

If you have ever been down, depressed, perhaps even longing for life to end, you may appreciate the life of William Cowper. William Cowper (pron.’Cooper’) was born in exciting times. He lived through the voyages of Captain James Cook, the French Revolution and the American War of Independence.

He is best known for his magnificent hymns and his writings which included ‘The Task’ and ‘The Castaway’.

He was a firm believer in the Gospel and all of its promises, and yet, was probably one of the most miserable, melancholy people you could ever meet. He attempted suicide several times and it was only divine intervention through friends like John Newton, plus low ocean tides, weak wrists and weak ropes that kept this poor man alive.

There are many possible reasons for his lifelong battle with depression. Brutalised in school by older boys, the death of his mother at age six, and a largely absent father. All these things may have been the outward contributors to the sadness of his soul, yet William lived.

He lived because, though it was the will of the Lord to crush Him, it was also the will of the Lord to sustain Him. Can we accept both of these things as true and that both come from the hand of the Lord?

Charles Spurgeon did. Riddled and in agony with the pain of gout while in his prime, “It is a great mercy”, writes Spurgeon, “to get one hour’s sleep at night, to have only one knee tortured at a time. What a blessing to be able to put one foot on the ground again, if only for a minute.”

Speaking to his congregation after a particularly painful period of gout, Spurgeon said,

“When I was racked some months ago with pain so that I could no longer bear it without crying out, I asked all to go from the room and leave me alone. There, I had nothing I could say to God but this, ‘You are my Father, and I am your child;  I could not bear to see my child suffer as you make me suffer, and if I saw him tormented as I am now, I would do what I could to help him, and put my arms under him to sustain him.”

“Will You hide Your face from me, my Father? Will You still lay on a heavy hand, and not give me a smile from Your countenance?’”

Spurgeon’s surest comfort in his affliction, and in the depression he suffered throughout most of his adult life was this: That his trial was measured out by the hand of a loving Father – and not the indifferent, loveless machine of a godless universe.

We like to think we are in control of life: That we can make the happiness happen. We aren’t, and we can’t. We are the weak. Sadness, depression and grief hit us suddenly, and we fall.

What do you do? Where do you anchor your soul when strength gives way to sadness? In one of his most well known and beloved hymns Cowper wrote,

Ye fearful saints, fresh courage take, the clouds you so much dread, are big with mercy and shall break in blessings on your head.

With these words, Cowper, down, but not out, was echoing another man who had suffered with great melancholy. A man called Asaph. A man who sang of the anchor that steadied his soul in unsteady times.

My heart and my strength may fail, but God is the strength of my heart, and my portion forever. For me, it is good to be near God. (Psalm 73)

The roots of Cowpers’ endurance, like Asaph, were not in himself. They were anchored in someone who had also come into this world, stricken and acquainted with grief. And He became for us an anchor that we can hold onto.

Or better yet, an anchor who will lay hold of us,  when (not if) our heart and our strength should fail.

Jesus did not promise an easy life, free from pain. But He did promise to uphold us and be with us in the pain so that, in the end, we would endure to eternal life where every tear will be wiped away.

Related...

Little Romans
Flattery
No Mere Mortals
Crossing the Jordan

Filed Under: Who we Are Instead Tagged With: Grief, Joy, Sadness


Writing Ideas on Sermo HumilisWhat do You Want to Read About?

 

Nothing like real-world issues to focus the mind. If you have something you would like me to write about, send me a message and let me know.

 

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. David TrounceKaren Mackay says

    August 13, 2020 at 5:46 pm

    Thank you David. Wonderful article. Also love psalm 73. It’s often a heartbreaking challenge watching others close to you, rather than yourself, endure lifelong physical/emotional pain…trusting God has purpose while you “wait” upon Him for that healing for them, in this life…or not. Imagine if Spurgeon knew that his honesty in his suffering was touching lives even today. The testimony of those who have gone before…what a joy to read of them! Thank you.

    Reply
  2. David TrounceDavid Trounce says

    August 13, 2020 at 6:30 pm

    So true. And what Spurgeon has been for so many is hopefully what our lives will be to our children and grand children – a testimony. A memory of us that will encourage and comfort them when they land in places of sadness or suffering. A pray that it would be true for you and your family.

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Karen Mackay Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Sermo Humilis

For the love of all things true, beautiful and good.


Welcome to Sermo Humilis, a digital home for biblical discipleship and cultural Christianity. A few new thoughts every week.

Please remember to like, subscribe and share. It really helps me out.

Subscribe for Weekly Updates

As per our Privacy Policy, we will never hand your information to a third party.

please check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

Categories

  • Life in Christendom
  • Just a Thought
  • Who we Are Instead

Find us on Social

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Medium
  • RSS
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Support Sermo Humilis

If you enjoy Sermo Humilis and want to say thanks you can support me here.

Support

Series

Sidebar - Words that Matter Sidebar Series - Proverbs - Let the Lady Speak Sidebar - Jesus Through all of Life Series

The Most Popular Guff

Bright Eyes and Happy Hearts

With young couples struggling to save up for a deposit on their first

Principles, Not Rules

Children love the edges of things and so they build their castles on

Gollum is as Gollum Does

The current push to see a needle in every arm has given rise to new

Fighting Shy

Sometimes, Jesus stood toe-to-toe with those who opposed Him.

Building on The Rock

At the end of the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 7:24-27), Jesus

Follow Me

Comparisons are inevitable. The fact is, there are some seats over

Beyond the Jolly Fat Man

Despite what we might think we are teaching our kids, most of them are

See and Hear

On the move? Weekly content can also be seen and heard via Youtube.

Topics

Beauty Charity Children Covenant Creation Death Discipleship Earth Evangelism Faith Faithfulness Fear Fellowship Freedom Gospel Grace Grief Guilt Holiness Idolatry Jesus Joy Judgement Kingdom Law Liberty Life Love Marriage Mercy Money Power Redemption Rest Resurrection Righteousness Sacrifice Salvation Service Sin Truth War Weakness Wisdom Worship

Footer

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Subscribe to Sermo Humilis

Find us on Social

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • RSS
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Support Sermo Humilis

If you enjoy Sermo Humilis and want to say thanks you can support me here.

Support

Copyright © 2022 · Sermo Humilis

Thor's Oak

Around 723 AD, a missionary named Boniface entered Hesse in Germany. Upon finding a sacred tree named Thor’s Oak, he took an axe to it, cut it down and built a church. Many in the town, believing that the God of Boniface must be greater than Thor, left their paganism behind converted to Christianity.