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I think sometimes we as christians, and especially pastors, can end up feeling stuck between our frailty and our faith. There are times when a pastor probably should say I'm not the best person to help, but saying that leads to questions of is the wisdom of God not sufficient, can God not handle this, if Christ can really heal all the brokenness of the world shouldn't he be enough, etc.
All too often this ends up as a kind of, well we don't want to send them to the world (one of the questions that keeps me from seeking advice in a lot of places is the concern that while I may get advice that will enable me to get what I want, I'm not so sure that such advice will be in keeping with God's commands and values) but since we really don't know what to tell them we end up giving them mostly useless platitudes like read your Bible more and pray about it (good things to do, but certainly not a whole answer in addressing a serious problem) or some vague wait on God and he will somehow magically fix it.
All too often this ends up as a kind of, well we don't want to send them to the world (one of the questions that keeps me from seeking advice in a lot of places is the concern that while I may get advice that will enable me to get what I want, I'm not so sure that such advice will be in keeping with God's commands and values) but since we really don't know what to tell them we end up giving them mostly useless platitudes like read your Bible more and pray about it (good things to do, but certainly not a whole answer in addressing a serious problem) or some vague wait on God and he will somehow magically fix it.
If it were a physical thing, people generally wouldn't say give it to God, like they would for mental health issues. I'm picturing someone getting their broken in an accident and someone saying "give it to God" instead of taking them to the hospital. To be fair, a lot of what is being learned about these is pretty new, especially around family dysfunction, trauma, etc.
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