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I often wondered what would've happened if Job had committed suicide.
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Would have been a much shorter book.I often wondered what would've happened if Job had committed suicide.
I often wondered what would've happened if Job had committed suicide.
I guess what bothers me about the use of "inner demons" is that, since this has been brought to the forefront, I've read blogs about how people need to "rely on God".....or "pray for God to help" (as if that hasn't been done) or other things along those lines. It just seems to bring it too close to, "a REAL Christian wouldn't struggle with this".....and that's wrong. You know what I mean?
no i was not addressing your post at all, or any other posts in this thread, and i sincerely appologize if anything i posted led you to believe that i was.
I was merely relating my feelings about my own family member's decisions and actions relating to the experience of actively participating in the assisted suicide of a family member, and then later requesting others to participate in their own assisted suicide. And no, i'm not refering to comfort care. in both cases it went far beyond that point.
the thing is that in this life there are very few people who are not connected in some way to another human being.
From the time before we are born till ater we die, we are connected to someone.
Whether it be thru a family relation, thru friendship, being employed or being an employer, thru commerce, writing, reading, or just listening our senses connect us to this world. and all the activity that happens around us affects us and is in turn being affected by our being here.
we think, we speak, we hold opinions, we bring joy, we laugh, we cry, but we are participants in each moment of life. and in that participation however great or small it may be, the lives of others are changed irrevocably because we are alive.
To die without compleating a life is to die too soon.
I think that particular comparison is a bit of a stretch. A person who dies from cancer can have any number of actual causes of death (depending on which one comes first). And a suicide can have any number of actual causes (overdose, hanging, gunshot). But depression isn't inherently lethal. Cancer is. Suicide is. So those are sufficiently explanatory. But saying that someone died of depression would be confusing. I'm thinking especially of children, who might hear an explanation like that and not fully grasp the fact that depression itself isn't lethal, but rather inspired the suicide. You wouldn't want kids, with a rudimentary understanding of what depression is, to have a bad day and worry that it might actually kill them. You know?
That's exactly what I was thinking (but in terms of Robin Williams, who was 63 years old). If there were a way out of being bi-polar....I'm sure he would have sought that out.
The problem comes up in that people who are depressed can't be accused of contemplating life. In fact, it's pretty much the opposite... Anybody I've met who's dealing with depression are among the most contemplative people I know. All they do is contemplate their life... The problem is, they contemplate and they come up with a void. They think they don't bring joy, they don't feel joy, their opinions are valueless, the people who love them are hurt by their existing, that any impact they have is negligible, replaceable, unimportant, or actually actively detrimental. Hearing people talk after unsuccessful attempts, a ton say that their motivation was not just stopping their unrelenting pain, but to stop or avoid causing that unrelenting pain to others. Their broken self-perception due to the depression has them convinced as much as you or are convinced the sky is blue that the loss of them is a temporary pain by family as opposed to the lifelong pain of managing them.
As far as I know, Job didn't have a mental illness.
I'm not sure anyone could go through what he did and NOT develop one.
My point still stands. Job was put through SO MUCH in his life. His friends even encouraged to turn away from God. He never did. I'm sure he had doubts. I'm sure he asked why God was "picking" on him.
Our God is a God of comfort. Suicide is never NOT sinful. I don't think it's an automatic ticket to Hell, but I get really upset when suicide is condoned. Ultimately, I put those souls in the hands of God, because only He will know what was in their hearts.
There should be no discussion on if suicide is a sin
Job is a hero because he endured. The same could be said about him that I've heard said about Columbus. "If he had given up, nobody would have blamed him. But who would have remembered him?"
It's difficult calls like suicide that make me glad I'm not God, and glad He is the judge, not me. I don't believe His judgment is absolutely black-and-white, but not knowing where His gray areas are, I wouldn't presume to speak for Him. He knows details we do not. For example, we say we don't know what is going on in their minds. He does.
The Biblical suicide I'm thinking of is Judas Iscariot. He could have repented the same as Peter did. The Lord would have gladly restored Him too, the same as He restored Peter. Instead, Judas chose suicide while Peter chose confession, repentance, and forgiveness. Does that mean Judas is in hell? Not my call to make, so I won't even guess.
Now, the topic of this thread being the effect on family--the disciples were a family. Jesus said they were His mother and brothers. How do you suppose Judas's suicide affected them afterward?
No one is condoning (or promoting) suicide.
There's a difference between situational depression (reactive) and clinical depression. With clinical depression---it doesn't really matter what the life circumstances are---the depression doesn't "go away" in happy times or less stressful times (because that's not what it's based on).
From the mod hat post:
There's a difference between situational depression (reactive) and clinical depression. With clinical depression---it doesn't really matter what the life circumstances are---the depression doesn't "go away" in happy times or less stressful times (because that's not what it's based on).