By John Mark Reynolds
Philosophical Fragments
http://www.patheos.com/blogs/philosophicalfragments/2013/06/03/prevailing-over-depression/
Sorrow in my life comes several different ways. If I sin, fall short 
of God’s standards, then my sin makes me sorrow. If I hold onto sin, 
then my depression deepens, eventually becoming a “new normal.”
The only cure for this sort of sorrow is change: Jesus releases me 
from the guilt and empowers me to live a new life. I can recall the calm
 and joy settling on me when I gained victory over sin’s sorrow. Only a 
fool is his own lawyer or his own confessor: when I struggle with sin I 
talk to my earthly father, who is very wise, and a spiritual father.
And yet, as my wife experiences, not all sorrow is the result of sin:
 some sorrows or depression are biological. Such sorrow is disconnected 
from behavior and holiness will not help. Medicine cannot cure a soul, 
but it can help a body misfiring in relation to a soul. When I have had 
sorrow that behavior change does not change, then I turn to the medical 
doctor.
Spirituality is dangerous, however. Awakening the soul would be safe 
only if all spiritual powers were good for us or meant our good. 
Experience shows this is a lie. Devils exist and they don’t love humans.
 Sometimes I have been sad and turned to spiritual fathers and mothers 
for prayers of deliverance. I have felt the release of spiritual 
oppression lifting and known that not all gods are good.
Still a priest and a doctor are not enough: some sorrow washes over me, because of the way of the world.
How can be happy when so many hurtful things are done? People lie, 
cheat, steal, hate, and kill. The bad news washes over me every day and 
it can paralyze me. It isn’t just my sin, it is the sin of billions over
 thousands of years and all the complex suffering it causes.
How can I be happy when people are starving, hurting, or dying?
Jesus wept. We see the same world, with less power, and weep.
There is no cheering up from this sorrow: it is the constant undercurrent of pain that must exist before Heaven.
No Christian, no human being, can know evil exists and be totally 
cheerful. The only way we survive is the hope grounded in knowledge, 
faith, that God will rectify all pain and suffering. Part of being a 
child of God is resting in His care, but part of being a man or woman of
 God is knowing everything will not be alright this side of death.
There is a reason the symbol of the Christian faith is a cross: we 
are on the Cross side of reality, but know that joy is coming. Life will
 win, life has won, but we do not experience that timeless reality yet.
The older I get the more I miss friends and family who have gone 
ahead and the more I realize that perfect happiness will only come when 
my term in this life is ended.
This all sounds cheerless enough, but knowing it has actually helped 
me. There are many times, in fact most times, when soul and body are in 
good order and when in this life I catch a glimpse of love. The image of
 God is in every person I see. The creation of God, even if shattered by
 sin, still is very good. Jesus lives in my heart and so I can sing His 
song, even in exile.
This world is not my home, but it is enough like my heart’s true Home to help.
And so when asked, “Are you happy?” I often pause. “No,” I think, “not so much,” but then I reply, “Mostly, yes.”
It is true. My happiness is in goodness that is so deep in the 
cosmos, humans cannot touch it. My happiness is in beauty so real that 
sin can only partially obscure it. My happiness is in Jesus: a person 
who always speaks truth.
Sin, biology, devils, and the world can make me sad, but my feelings 
are more complex than one emotion. Salvation, biology, liberation, and 
creation can make me glad now and it is joy to know that the happiness 
will grow and the sorrow pass away.
