R
Robert_Sock
Guest
I think I remember reading that it was a sin, but I’m not sure.
He is closer when we are hurting. That I am hurting does not mean I don’t know that He is there…I certainly know that He is…Despair is you failing to sense that JESUS has placed a hand on each side of your face and leaned-in and touched his nose to yours.
Life becomes pointed until you acknowledge HIM, then he smiles and you follow him.
This is correct. In the words of Gandalf or Elrond or some such character in The Lord of the Rings, despair is for those who see the end beyond all hope. But from a Christian perspective we never see this in life, because our hope is in God.The sin of despair. Yes, despair is a sin; it is a sin against the virtue of hope.
I think that due to your medical condition few people if anyone here could discern whether it appears you are guilty of the sin of despair. Despair is a sin, but in principle mental/emotional issues could possibly elicit feelings of despair without the actual spiritual reality of despair being present.Deep clinical despair and extremely anxious today, remembering back to the times I felt like I was going to become homeless. These feelings are felt in my body; although a part of my mind appears to be hurting and lacking in hope, the greater part of my mind is clear and calm, and largely focused on God. I took Xanax for the anxiety, but I my body feels almost entirely immobilized. I feel like this on most days, but today it’s more severe.
(Please note that I already have a psychologist and psychiatrist, and so I’m not seeking medical advice, which is against forum rules; instead, I’m only seeking spiritual advice and an answer to whether of not it’s a sin.).
Robert, if you have clinical depression that can limit your culpability if you feel despair.Deep clinical despair and extremely anxious today, remembering back to the times I felt like I was going to become homeless. These feelings are felt in my body; although a part of my mind appears to be hurting and lacking in hope, the greater part of my mind is clear and calm, and largely focused on God. I took Xanax for the anxiety, but I my body feels almost entirely immobilized. I feel like this on most days, but today it’s more severe.
(Please note that I already have a psychologist and psychiatrist, and so I’m not seeking medical advice, which is against forum rules; instead, I’m only seeking spiritual advice and an answer to whether of not it’s a sin.).