Thanksgiving. Christmas. New Years. It’s that time of year—six weeks of festivities.
However, holidays are not festive for everyone. So, in past years, I’ve posted a several-part blog series entitled Healing for the Holidays. By God’s grace, this series has benefited many people.
I’ve now made the entire series available as a free 20-page PDF that you can download at Healing for the Holidays. To easily share this free document, feel free to send people this shortened link: https://bit.ly/1Holiday2Healing
I developed the Healing for the Holidays series from the gift-book God’s Healing for Life’s Losses: How to Find Hope When You’re Hurting. You can download Quotes of Note, a sample chapter, and more, for free at the God’s Healing Page here.
Here’s the first page of the Healing for the Holiday’s PDF…
Holidays… They’re “supposed” to make us think of words like “thankful,” “merry,” and “happy.” We’re “supposed” to associate holidays with a phrase like “Home for the Holidays!”
But… what if a loved one is not coming home this holiday season? What if death, divorce, distance, or family discord causes us to associate the holidays with words and feelings like depression, anxiety, and stress?
Holidays can create fresh memories of our loss and a fresh experience of pain and grief. The thought of facing another holiday season causes some people to wish they could sleep from the Wednesday before Thanksgiving until January 2.
Loss is always hard, and at the holidays it can seem crushing. The thought of being in a festive mood for two months is just too much to bear when our heart is breaking.
Some of you might be thinking, “Bob. Don’t be such a downer. I love the holidays!”
Awesome. I have no desire to diminish your joy.
However, your experience is not universal. For many of your friends, neighbors, co-workers, and relatives, the holidays are bittersweet. So keep reading…if not for yourself, then for others—so you can empathize with and care for those who need healing for the holidays.
Jesus understands.
“I have told you these things, so that in me you may have peace. In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world” (John 16:33).
I include this verse every time I autograph a copy of God’s Healing for Life’s Losses.
In this one verse, Jesus gives you permission to grieve and permission to hope. Jesus is real and raw, just like life can be. He is also honest and hope-giving. His words, His life, death, and resurrection, give us healing hope.
The apostle Paul offers the same message of sorrow mingled with healing. Sharing with Christians who had lost loved ones, Paul speaks of Christian grief—grieving with hope.
“We do not want you to be uninformed about those who sleep in death, so that you do not grieve like the rest of mankind—who have no hope” (1 Thessalonians 4:13).
To download your free copy of Healing for the Holidays, click here.
The Bible’s emphasis on realistic grieving along with resurrection hope is why I’ve penned my “trilogy on grief.” The Trinity’s empathy for the grieving and encouragement for the hurting is why I’ve penned three books on biblical lament and resurrection hope:
As you’re in this midst of this year’s holiday season from Thanksgiving to New Year’s Day, are you enjoying it, overwhelmed by it, indifferent to it, in in need of healing?
During this holiday season, who could you minister to by understanding that this may be a difficult time of the year for them and by caring and sharing Christ’s healing hope?
The post Healing for the Holidays: 2024 appeared first on RPM Ministries.