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  When to Embrace Pain and When to Avoid It

Exam KEY
 
     
 
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Here are responses to consider offering for the seven cases.  There are many other good alternatives, but offer these as one model in hopes that you better understand what I've taught in this class.  Note, that the second response of mine gently connects the person's pain with my sense of the needed growth step.  I expect that coming up with this type of response is a stretch for you!

1. A woman is scared of being verbally abused by her husband again.  She thinks she deserves it.  (Pain from being sinned against.)

Offer compassion for how she's being mistreated: "You live on pins and needles around him.  You never know when he's going to explode on you."

Attempt to re-direct her anger in a positive direction: "It seems that you're blaming yourself for his problem with being abusive.  I wonder where your feelings of anger are?"

2. A man is angry at his wife for continually yelling harsh "character assassinations" at his daughter and her step-daughter.  (Pain over his daughter being sinned against.)

Validate his concern: "It troubles you deeply that you daughter feels so belittled by your wife."

Gently encourage personal responsibility: "I'm gathering that this has happened before.  I wonder what you're doing to protect your daughter and hold your wife accountable."

3. A lonely and depressed young man feels guilty about using pornography on the Internet again.  (Pain over personal sin.)

Empathize with his struggle: "You feel badly that you can't seem to stop using pornography."

Connect pain to sin: "It seems that using porn is a way that you cope with your loneliness, but it doesn't really help you because what you need is to feel understood and cared for."

4. A 45-year old man cries because his wife, the mother of their three small children, has died in a car accident.  (Pain over a tragedy that happened and no one chose.)

Empathize with her loss: "You miss her so much.  She was a wonderful wife and mother and you need her back. You don't know how you're going to cope without her. You're worried for your kids and how their going to manage life without their mother. You don't understand how God could let this happen."

If the timing is appropriate gently open her heart to God's involvement in her pain: "It's hard to imagine how you can re-construct meaning in your life and faith after this loss."

5. A depressed man is consumed with being more successful and making more money.  (Pain over denying hunger for God and neglecting to reverence Him above all.)

Empathize: "You want more than anything to take your career to the next level."

Respond to the deeper level need if you hear it present: "You're absorbed with your career and yet inside something gnaws at you that their must be something more for you in life."

6. A depressed wife feels guilty asking her husband to respond to her needs to be listened to and appreciated.  (Pain over mistaking self-denial for self-negation and choosing an unhealthy posture of shame.)

Empathize: "You want your husband's support but you feel undeserving of it."

Validate her sense of self: "You need to feel that you're a valuable person and you want your husband to show you this."

7. A confident Christian man is criticized by his workaholic boss for leaving work at 5:30 to have dinner with his family and go to a midweek church service.  (Pain from choosing to endure persecution for Christ's sake.)

Empathize: "It worries you that your boss judges you negatively and yet you know it's only because you're a Christian."

Affirm his opportunity to be a witness for Christ:  "It sounds like God is using you as a positive witness in his life and it's a challenge for you to remain positive under this persecution."

 

 
     
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