If your pain has brought you to the edge of the grave, where you feel the dark pull to end your life, please hear this first: you are precious, and help is near. In your country, you can reach local emergency services by dialing your emergency number. For a listening ear and immediate support, visit
findahelpline.com; they can connect you to someone who understands. Do not sit alone with thoughts of death. Reach out now.
Now, let me sit beside you in this darkness.
You look at your life and you see only wreckage, your body broken, your husband gone, your girls ashamed, your own heart so full of loathing that you wonder if your sister spoke truth when she said you deserve to be dead. I hear you. And I do not brush that away. It is no small thing to feel your very bones dried up, your hope scattered like dust on the wind. But I want to tell you, very gently, that you are not the first soul to stand among the graves and whisper that all is lost. There is One who walks right into that valley, and He does not pass by. His name is Jesus, and He is not afraid of your ruin.
You called yourself a fool, and perhaps you have been foolish, many of us have. But have you ever read about a woman whose husband abandoned her for forty years? He lived in fine society, made his name, and never once sent her a penny or a kind word. And when he was spent, diseased, and bankrupt, he dragged himself back to her door. Would you believe she opened it with delight? She nursed him, sat with him, wore herself out caring for the man who had wasted her youth. That story, strange as it is, is but a faint shadow of the heart of God toward wandering souls. We often treat Him with far less kindness than that brutish husband showed his wife, we forget Him for half a lifetime, we pour our love into bottles and broken cisterns, and yet when we truly turn back, He does not slam the door. His love is not like ours: it does not depend on us being pretty, or young, or whole. It is not shocked by brain damage or stained pasts. It runs deeper than all your ruin.
You think you have nothing left. I understand that feeling. But even now, you have breath in your lungs, and you have a God who is still speaking. He is not silent because your faith has grown dim; He is never silent unless our ears are deaf. Open the Scriptures, and you will find a promise that is as fresh for you today as if Jesus Himself spoke your name: “Fear not, I am with you.” No dream or vision is needed; you have the sure Word. And in that Word you will hear Him say to dried bones, “Behold, I will open your graves and cause you to come up out of your graves.” You cannot dig yourself out of the pit, but He can command life into what seems dead. His “shall” is mightier than your “I cannot.” “They shall walk up and down in my strength,” He says, and that promise is for broken-down, strengthless people who have no ability of their own to stand.
I know you miss the days when faith felt easy and prayer was heaven below. Do you remember? You may have forgotten, but the same Christ who was dear to you then is yours still. The kitchen has not changed, nor the Bread of heaven. It is the appetite that has grown dull. Yet even a weak hunger is a sign of life. You are not content to perish; you are reaching out now, and that reaching is the faintest pulse of the Spirit stirring within. Do not despise the day of small things. The woman who touched but the hem of Christ’s garment was healed, though her fingers trembled.
You mentioned your daughters. You say you want happiness for their sake. I think your love for them, though you feel it’s been spoiled, is a holy thread. Lift your eyes to their Father in heaven, who loves them perfectly and will not abandon them. Let Him carry what you cannot. You do not need to fix yourself before you come to Him; you come as you are, failed, frightened, full of shame, and He will not cast you out.
The Enemy would have you believe that God’s mercy is a stream that has run dry for you. Do not listen. The cross of Christ is a deeper fountain than all your sin. He trod the winepress alone so that no stain of yours need ever condemn you if you trust Him. Even your worst days were laid on Him. So do not say your hope is lost. Hope is a Person, and He is alive forevermore.
Let me pray with you, not because I have anything to offer of my own, but because Jesus bids us come boldly:
Lord Jesus, we bring before You this precious soul, so weighed down with sorrow that she can scarcely lift her head. You see the brain damaged by drink, the heart scarred by rejection and loneliness. You see the daughters who need their mother made whole. We ask, mighty Savior, that You would say to these dried bones, “Live.” Breathe new hope where there is only despair. Let her know she is loved with an everlasting love, not because she is worthy, but because You are gracious. Give her strength for this hour, and in the days to come, let her find that You are able to restore the years the locusts have eaten. For Your own name’s sake, and for the sake of her family, raise her up and grant her a foretaste of that joy which comes in the morning. Amen.