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Tag: Broken

Weeping for the Broken: Part 2

Brief Introduction: A Continuation

In the previous article, I wrote a type of personal introduction to a type of experience that I observed in the book of Nehemiah. It was something that helped me with personal brokenness, and it is my desire that this would also be a help to you or your friend as you climb through the rubble and begin to allow God to put you back together again.

It’s a Personal Journey

This is the story of Weeping for the Broken. It’s a story that I’m going to tell in a modern way. In fact, I’m telling it in a very personal way. I want to share with you a journey of brokenness and the process of healing in a fresh way. It is my hope that you will be able to use this story for your personal healing or even for that of a friend.

The Broken Reach Out For Help

Nehemiah’s story begins with a visit from his brother and some friends who tell him how very broken down his beloved city is. They tell him that the city is broken down and that the people who are there are in trouble and are disgraced. The wall of the town is broken down and the gates have been burned by fire.

Brokenness

I’m going to put this into a personal narrative for you. Perhaps you have been going through troubles in your life and you feel disgraced. Maybe you’re not there now but maybe you have been there. After all the troubles you have experienced, perhaps, you come to this moment of realization that you are broken. You take a moment and assess your personal brokenness and realize that your boundaries are broken. Not just that, but you’ve been burned in the gates of your conscience where you give permission or refrain from it. You find yourself feeling as heavy as a two-ton weight. Perhaps, you begin to recognize that there are people who seem to suck the living energy from you. Perhaps, you are experiencing the brokenness of an unseen but very present war.

What Did Nehemiah Do? What Was His Response?

Let’s look at what Nehemiah’s natural human response was. In verse 4, it says that he sat down and wept. Weeping is very different from crying. Weeping is the expression of the agony of irrepressible grief and sorrow. Nehemiah was mourning as he prayed and fasted to the God of heaven.

Weeping for the Broken

Perhaps that is your experience of discovering yourself or your friend in a state of brokenness. It breaks your own heart, and you can’t help but weep and mourn for what was lost through the trials that you’ve just come through. You’re not your normal self and you realize that you don’t know how to get back to that. Perhaps you’ve lost your appetite for more than just food. Perhaps you’ve lost your appetite for everything that you ever loved. So now you sit down and weep for yourself or for your friend. And now, as you’ve been experiencing this for a short time, you begin to pray.

Note: What I’m going to do now is walk you through Nehemiah’s prayer. It’s not going to be for the same thing that he prayed for. This prayer is for you, my friend. This prayer is the beginning of your healing journey. This is how you begin to pray for your healing:

Reaching Out in Brokenness

O Lord, God of heaven, the great and awesome God who keeps His agreement of unfailing love with those who love Him and obey His commandments. Listen to my prayer! Look down and see me praying night and day for my brokenness or my friend’s brokenness. I confess that we have sinned against you. Yes, I know that I have sinned against You. I know that my friend has sinned against You. We have sinned terribly by not obeying Your commandments.

Remembering God’s Promises

Please remember that You said, ‘If I am unfaithful to You, You will scatter me among the nations. But if I return to You and obey Your commandments and live by them, then even if I become an outcast from among all my friends and family and everyone that I know, You will bring me back to the place of healing and to the peace of mind that You have chosen for Your name to be honored.’

Seeking Restoration

As You restore me by Your great power and strong hand, I am Your servant. Oh Lord, please hear my prayer! Listen to the prayers of those of us who delight in honoring You. Please grant me success today by bringing the right people into my life who are willing to help me build myself back up again. Even as they see me in my brokenness, put it in their hearts to be kind to me.”

Who are You? What is God Calling You to do? Where is He Calling You to Go?

Now you get up and do what it is you need to do. Nehemiah was the king’s cupbearer. What are you in your relationship with God, your heavenly Father? He promises that if you will spend time nurturing a relationship with Him by praying and reading His word, that He will come and be close with you.

In Jeremiah 29:11, God states that He knows the plans that He has for you. He has good plans and not plans for disaster. He wants to give you a future and a hope. Verse 13 says that if you will look for the Lord wholeheartedly, He will be found by you. He will gather you from the [brokenness] that you are splintered into. He will bring you home again to who you are.

Tell Me About It

This is just the beginning of what it means to weep for brokenness whether it is your own or someone else’s. In the next article, I will take a deeper look at Inspecting the Brokenness. For now, have you or a friend experienced brokenness? And what did you do about it in your grief? Did you reach out to God? Do you need help reaching out to God?  Tell me about it below or share it privately at [email protected]

Weeping for the Broken

Part 1 – Introduction

This morning I started reading the book of Nehemiah to begin my day and I was surprised to see that Nehemiah’s experience can be associated with what we feel and experience today. Then I decided to look at the headings of all the chapters and what I found was that Nehemiah can be read in a way that is much like a self-realization experience that brings us either back to God or just that it brings us in a closer relationship with healing before a mighty God.

I thought about listing the titles of the headings here but that is something that you have the ability to look up for yourselves. What I’m going to do is tell a story through the eyes of a personal experience with brokenness and bring it through the battles and upheavals of healing and restoration. Follow through these next articles with me in this series of Weeping For The Broken.

Personal Vision

This is just the beginning and the introduction of my story or the story that I see through Nehemiah’s experience. This is what I see when I look at the headings for each section through the book of Nehemiah.

  1. Weeping for the Broken
  2. The Broken Reach Out
  3. Inspecting the Brokenness
  4. Rebuilding From Ruins
  5. Opposition of Frenemies
  6. Personal Defense for Rebuilding
  7. Continued Opposition during Rebuilding
  8. The Broken Made Whole
  9. The Broken Restored
  10. Personal Education
  11. Experiencing the Shelter of God’s Love
  12. Confessing Our Own Sins
  13. Decision to Obey
  14. Personal Vows
  15. The Lord Abiding Within
  16. History of Personal Leadership
  17. Dedicating the Wholeness
  18. Provision for Personal Worship
  19. Personal Reforms

These are just the things that stand out to me personally. They may not make sense to you just yet. As you continue reading what I see, I pray that you will be able to use it for healing in your own personal life or for your friends.

My Personal Story of Weeping

I want to tell my own personal story of weeping for the broken. This is my story of weeping for someone who was very broken. I wish that I could say that I was involved in their daily life but it was a physical impossibility. I know, though, it gives me greater opportunity to share with you that it was God’s work in answering my prayers and not anything that I have done beyond prayer and the bits of communication that we shared on a personal level.

My Prayer of Forgiveness

Several years ago, in the middle of the night, I was unable to sleep and so I got up and decided to pray. I found a quiet place in another room and as I began praying, I heard God ask me a very pointed question. This is what I heard. “Are you willing to forgive the person that I have put on your heart?” I felt a surprise within myself that I had not thought of this before even though I knew that I did not have positive feelings toward this one individual in my life.

I thought, “Wow! It has been a long time since I thought about this. I really should address it.” Then I said to God, “Yes. I’m willing to forgive my friend. I forgive my friend.”

Weeping in Prayer

In that moment, God’s reply came back immediately. He said, “Pray for your friend.”

So, as I began to pray for my friend, I began weeping like I have never wept or grieved in all my life. I wept so hard that my heart hurt. In fact, every time I thought of this person I prayed. And every night that I could not sleep, at the moment I began praying for my friend, I couldn’t even say anything because I entered a state of grieving like this…the weeping for a lost soul.

A Time For Rebuilding

God was not done with me yet. He used this situation to heal whatever was broken in my own heart and at the same time, He used me to reach out to this one person who walked away from Him because of his own broken heart and life experiences. I’m going to share a couple of examples of the way God used me to minister to my friend.

God’s Response to My Prayers

My friend had just went through the experience of almost dying on the operating table to remove a small tumor. When they were well enough to talk, they shared with me that it was the biggest wake-up call of their life. My friend had given up on trying to make things right with God because they didn’t think that they could come back to God. They thought it was too late because here they were toward the end of their life and they had done so much to walk the way they walked in life that they thought that there was no use going back. Little did they know that God was searching for this lost soul to be found.

Another time that I called my friend was when I heard God pleading with me to call them one evening. It just happened to be a time when they were about to have another operation and they were feeling uncertain and fearful. The future beyond this surgery was not guaranteed either. So I called my friend and God put a song in my mind that I shared. The song was called, “Oh, Why Not Tonight.” I sang the first verse of the song. We both felt the sure presence of the Lord in this moment. My friend survived the surgery.

Spiritual Restoration and Hope

Later, I traveled to see my friend in their home and I brought a set of Bible studies. I shared with them that I would like for them to see what I do. As we studied the first few lessons, they were foggy-brained and couldn’t stay awake. But as we continued through the lessons, they found that there was hope and they were filled with joy as they remembered that they had been involved in doing Bible studies with people in the community.

My friend accepted Jesus as their Lord and Savior before they were laid to rest to wait for Jesus to come and call them from their grave.

This is just one of my experiences of weeping for the broken. God restored my friend’s spiritual self even though He did not restore their physical health. My friend died in the hope of salvation. This is what Weeping for the Broken is all about.

What is Your Experience?

Have you had an experience where you wept for someone who was broken? Feel free to share it in the comments or to send me an email at [email protected].

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