He Knows My Sorrow, He Calls Me to Love

As the Day Begins

“He is despised and rejected by men, a Man of sorrows and acquainted with grief.” — Isaiah 53:3

There is something deeply reassuring about knowing that God does not stand at a distance from our suffering. The prophet Isaiah uses the Hebrew phrase mak’obot (מַכְאֹבוֹת), meaning “pains” or “sorrows,” to describe the Messiah. This is not abstract suffering; it is intimate, experiential grief. Jesus did not merely observe human pain—He entered into it. When we begin our day, carrying burdens others cannot see, we are not walking a lonely road. Christ has already walked it. He has felt rejection, abandonment, misunderstanding, and sorrow. This means our pain is not foreign to God—it is known, felt, and understood.

That truth reshapes how we approach both our suffering and our calling. The Greek New Testament echoes this in 2 Corinthians 1:4, where Paul writes that God “comforts us in all our tribulation, that we may be able to comfort those who are in any trouble.” The word for comfort, parakaleō (παρακαλέω), carries the sense of coming alongside someone—like a companion who refuses to leave. This is the ministry of Christ, and it becomes the ministry of His followers. When we receive comfort, we are not meant to hoard it but to extend it. Love, as we will explore this week in Becoming Who God Wants Me to Be: Love, is not theoretical—it is incarnational. Easter is not just proof that Jesus lives; it is proof that love endures suffering and overcomes it.

There is a subtle but powerful shift that happens when we realize this. Instead of asking, “Why am I going through this?” we begin to ask, “How can God use this to shape love within me?” The fruit of the Spirit described in Galatians 5:22–23 is not developed in comfort alone. Love grows in the soil of shared suffering. Compassion is formed when we recognize in another person the same wounds Christ has healed in us. Like a scar that no longer causes pain but still tells a story, our past struggles become instruments of grace in the lives of others.

This morning, as you step into your day, remember that Jesus does not simply sympathize—He empathizes. He knows your name, your struggle, and your silent prayers. And from that place of being known, He calls you to love others with the same compassion He has shown you. This is how transformation begins—not by striving harder, but by receiving deeper.

Triune Prayer

Heavenly Father, I come before You with gratitude that You are not distant from my life but deeply involved in it. You see my struggles before I speak them, and You understand my fears before I name them. Thank You for sending Your Son to enter into human suffering so that I would never feel abandoned. Strengthen my heart today to trust Your care even when circumstances feel uncertain. Teach me to rest in Your faithfulness and to believe that You are working even in what I do not understand. Help me reflect Your love in every interaction I have today.

Jesus the Son, You are the Man of Sorrows who knows my grief. You carried burdens far greater than mine, yet You walked in obedience and love. Thank You for understanding my pain without judgment and for offering comfort that is real and present. As I go through this day, remind me that You are near. Shape my heart so that I respond to others with the same compassion You have shown me. Let my words bring healing, my actions reflect kindness, and my presence offer peace to those who are hurting.

Holy Spirit, come alongside me as my Comforter and Guide. Fill my heart with sensitivity to the needs of others and give me discernment to recognize where Your love is needed most. Empower me to live out the fruit of the Spirit, especially love, in practical and visible ways. When I feel weak, strengthen me. When I feel uncertain, guide me. When I feel overwhelmed, remind me of the presence of Christ within me. Let my life today be a vessel of Your comfort and grace.

Thought for the Day:
Because Christ understands your sorrow, you are free to extend His love—look for one person today who needs the comfort you have received and become God’s answer in their life.

For further reflection, consider this article on Christ’s suffering and compassion:
https://www.gotquestions.org/man-of-sorrows.html

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#ChristianComfortInSuffering #compassionOfChrist #fruitOfTheSpiritLove #Isaiah533Meaning #morningDevotionalFaithJourney

Don’t Let Him Pass By

Afternoon Moment

Busy afternoons have a way of narrowing our attention until all we can see is the next task, the next responsibility, the next deadline. But sometimes, right in the middle of all that hurry, the Lord invites us to pause—not only to catch our breath but to catch sight of Him again. Today’s brief study brings us to a familiar but deeply moving scene: a leper kneeling before Jesus, pleading for cleansing, and receiving not rejection but compassion.

Matthew tells the story simply:
“When He had come down from the mountain, great multitudes followed Him. And behold, a leper came and worshiped Him, saying, ‘Lord, if You are willing, You can make me clean.’ Then Jesus put out His hand and touched him saying, ‘I am willing; be cleansed.’ Immediately his leprosy was cleansed.” (Matthew 8:1–3)

This moment is powerful on any day, but on a busy afternoon—when we may feel unnoticed, unworthy, overlooked, or stretched thin—it speaks directly to our hearts. The leper’s story reminds us that Jesus is not overwhelmed by the crowd, distracted by the noise, or blind to the person with trembling needs at His feet. No matter how pressed Jesus was by the multitudes around Him, He never lost sight of the one who was reaching toward Him in faith.

And He will not lose sight of you.

 

The Courage to Step Forward

Leprosy was more than a disease; it was a sentence. In biblical times, lepers were considered cursed, unclean, and untouchable. They were banished from the community and forced to live on the outskirts of society. To approach people—much less a revered teacher—was forbidden. Yet this man dares to enter the crowd. He risks angry stares, rejection, even violence.

Why? Because he believes Jesus is his only Source of hope.

Some of us know exactly what that feels like. We’ve carried burdens for so long that we wonder if healing or help is still possible. Maybe you’re carrying an illness, a disappointment, a fractured relationship, or a private sorrow that never seems to lift. Maybe you have prayed for years and feel as though your voice has grown thin with fatigue.

Whatever your burden, this leper shows us what faith looks like when we’re desperate: it steps forward. It moves through fear. It ignores the voices that say, “You don’t belong here.” It refuses to remain hidden. It presses toward Jesus—not demanding, not bargaining, but trusting.

That faith echoes the Psalmist’s cry:
“I cried to the Lord with my voice, and He heard me from His holy hill.” (Psalm 3:4)

There is tremendous comfort here: your cry reaches God.
And God listens—not from a distance of indifference but from a hill of holiness, authority, and compassion.

 

“Lord, If You Are Willing…”

The leper’s prayer is simple, honest, and filled with insight. He does not doubt Jesus’ power—only Jesus’ willingness. His words reveal a heart that believes God can but is not sure God will.

How often do we pray from that very same place?

We know, theologically, that God is mighty. We know He can heal, restore, renew, provide, and intervene. But somewhere in the quiet corners of our hearts, we wonder: “Will God do it for me? Does He see me? Will He stop long enough to respond?”

The leper isn’t questioning Jesus’ character. He is questioning his own worthiness. And many believers wrestle with that same fear. We think:
“Maybe my pain is too small.”
“Maybe my life is too messy.”
“Maybe God has more important people to help.”
“Maybe He won’t stop for someone like me.”

But Jesus’ response cuts through all those fears.

 

Jesus Reaches Before He Speaks

Before Jesus ever says a word, He touches the leper.

This is astonishing. Touching a leper made a person ceremonially unclean. People recoiled from lepers. They threw stones to keep them away. They refused to stand downwind of them. But Jesus does not step back—He steps close.

He reaches out His hand, crossing every social and ceremonial boundary, and places His touch on the very place of pain, shame, and exclusion.

Then He speaks:
“I am willing.”
Not “I might be willing” or “I will think about it” or “Come back later.”
Just:
“I am willing.”

This is the heart of your Savior.

Whether He heals you physically, strengthens you spiritually, or carries you through circumstances rather than removing them, His willingness to meet you is never in question. He is willing to draw near. He is willing to comfort. He is willing to renew. He is willing to steady. He is willing to carry you in seasons of exhaustion, grief, or uncertainty.

Sometimes His willingness looks like healing.
Sometimes it looks like peace in the storm.
Sometimes it looks like strength in weakness.
But it always looks like love.

 

An Afternoon Pause for the Weary

Some who read these words have suffered a long time. You may be tired from life, from responsibilities, from prayers that seem unanswered, or from a quietly aching heart. You might be in the middle of a day that has demanded much of you—emotionally, physically, mentally.

This moment is for you.

Jesus does not pass by indifferent. He is not too busy, too crowded, too burdened, or too distant to stop for you. The leper’s story teaches us that Jesus’ compassion rises even when the demands around Him rise. His heart is not divided by crowds or dulled by pressure.

So don’t let Him pass by.
Step toward Him, even if all you can offer is a whispered prayer.
Let your weary hands rise in worship.
Let your trembling voice say, “Lord, if You are willing…”
And trust that His heart toward you remains:
“I am willing.”

If He chooses to heal, rejoice.
If He chooses to sustain you in the middle of hardship, lean on Him.
If He chooses to reshape the circumstances instead of removing them, rest in His wisdom.

Whatever He does, He will not abandon you.
And His willingness to walk with you will never change.

 

A Prayer for This Afternoon

Lord, do not pass me by.
Work in my life as I humbly bow before You.
Where I feel unclean, cleanse me.
Where I feel weary, strengthen me.
Where I feel overlooked, remind me that Your eyes never miss me.
Teach me to trust not only in Your power but in Your willingness.
And as I continue through this day, let Your presence steady me,
Your compassion lift me,
and Your touch make me whole in the ways only You can.

 

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#afternoonDevotional #compassionOfChrist #jesusHealsTheLeper #matthew813 #psalm34Devotional