A post that features some of the wisdom Zack Eswine gleaned from Charles Spurgeon about helping those who endure seasons of depression.

Here Eswine unfolds four points from Spurgeon about the origins of ‘the tendency of impatient care toward depression’ as he seeks to express some dos and don’ts for helping sufferers.

1. We judge others according to our circumstances rather than theirs. “There are a great many of you who appear to have a large stock of faith, but it is only because you are in very good health and your business is prospering. If you happened to get a disordered liver, or your business should fail, I should not be surprised if nine parts out of ten of your wonderful faith should evaporate.” Jesus teaches us about those who lay up heavy burdens on others but do not lift a finger to help (Matt. 23:4).
2. We still think that trite sayings or a raised voice can heal deep wounds. A person “may have a great spiritual sorrow, and someone who does not at all understand his grief, may proffer to him a consolation which is far too slight.” Like a physician who offers a common ointment for a deep wound, we “say to a person in deep distress things which have really aggravated him and his malady too.” In this regard, Charles teaches us the Scriptures, “Whoever sings songs to a heavy heart is like one who takes off a garment on a cold day, and like vinegar on soda” (Prov. 25:20).
3. We try to control what should be rather than surrender to what is. We must not “judge harshly, as if things were as we would theoretically arrange them, but we must deal with things as they are, and it cannot be questioned that some of the best believers are at times sorely put to it,” even “to know whether they are believers at all.” The Scriptures teach us about Job’s friends who struggled at this very point.
4. We resist humility regarding our own lack of experience. “There are some people who cannot comfort others, even though they try to do so, because they never had any troubles themselves. It is a difficult thing for a man who has had a life of uninterrupted prosperity to sympathize with another whose path has been exceedingly rough.” The Apostle Paul teaches us to comfort others out of the comfort that we ourselves have needed and received (2 Cor. 1:4).

source.

Miles Away was written by Josh Ritter after he looked through a book containing pictures of earth, taken from space.
It has a sense of not just being away from home, but being away from what is familiar.
Travelling yesterday was disconcerting.
Little things, like the over two-thirds empty long-term car park at Adelaide airport, walking through its people-less forecourt and ground floor, standing a little bit lost at the unstaffed makeshift Virgin check-in desk at 8.50am on a Monday morning – it didn’t open until 9.00 because no Virgin flights were due to leave for two hours after that, the masks, the cordoned off areas in both Adelaide and Brisbane terminals, the empty drop-off / pick-up lane at Brisbane.
All so familiar, yet so very different.

Came into this world, I was lost not found
It did not hold me in its arms like it holds me now
So I dreamed myself a bird who could cross the waves
And I woke up just a man who was miles away

The Zaccheaus Song (feat. Sandra McCracken & Paul Zach) is from Justice Songs by The Porter’s Gate Worship Collective.
An engaging exploration of what happens when grace comes home.
And one of the vocalists is Sandra McCracken.

This post will pop up from year to year to remind me of travel in 2020.

This is a plane.
This is airport fashion. Masks by Margaret.
My wearing made at least two people in Mount Gambier feel better, so that’s something.

 

Mid-afternoon Brisbane domestic airport pick-up / drop-off.
Traditional welcome.
It’s good somethings don’t change.