First Feel the Pain
Day 25 · Job 16:4–5
📖 TODAY’S SCRIPTURE
Job 16:4–5 (NIV)
“I also could speak like you, if you were in my place; I could make fine speeches against you and shake my head at you. But my mouth would encourage you; comfort from my lips would bring you relief.”
Today’s John 15 thread: Jesus is not a counsellor who speaks before He understands. He became flesh — He entered our pain — so that His words would carry weight. When we abide in Him, we learn to love the way He loves: presence first, then words.
✍️ REFLECTION
Two days ago we looked at what Job’s friends did right — they sat in silence for seven days, just present with him in his suffering. Then they opened their mouths, and everything unravelled.
Now we’re here: Job responding to their speeches. And what he says is striking.
He doesn’t just say “you’re wrong.” He says: I could do exactly what you’re doing. I could make the fine speeches. I could shake my head at you with theological authority.
Job knew the moves. He’d probably made them himself before his own dark season. The lectures. The explanations. The advice dressed up as comfort.
But then he says something that cuts right through: if it were me in your position, I would choose differently. My mouth would encourage you. My words would bring relief.
Q1: Think of someone in your life who is going through something hard right now. Be honest — is your first instinct to understand, or to fix? To feel, or to explain?
There’s a reason Job can say this with such clarity. He’s learned it the hard way, from the inside. When you’ve been in the darkness — when you’ve received bad theology dressed up as comfort — it changes what you reach for when you’re the one standing next to the suffering person.
The best definition of compassion isn’t sympathy. It’s feeling someone else’s pain in your own heart. Not processing it from a safe distance. Actually letting it land. And that’s costly — which is why we avoid it and default to advice instead.
Here’s what I keep coming back to: Jesus didn’t stay at a distance when He came to us. He became flesh. He grew tired. He wept. He felt the weight of what we carry — from the inside. And it’s only because He entered our pain that His words carry any real weight when He speaks into it.
Q2: Has there been a season when someone’s words brought you genuine relief — not because they were clever, but because you could tell they really felt what you were going through? What made the difference?
We live in a world drowning in advice and starving for presence. The Church is not immune. It’s easier — and more comfortable — to give someone a verse than to sit with their confusion. To tell someone God has a plan than to weep with them over the wreckage.
Job is showing us a different way. Choose comfort over cleverness. Choose to feel before you speak. Let the weight of someone else’s life actually land on you before you open your mouth.
Q3: Is there a relationship right now where you’ve been speaking when you should have been listening — or offering answers when what was needed was simply you?
🌿 REMAIN IN HIM
Take a moment before you move on. This isn’t a to-do. It’s an invitation to stay.
Reflect honestly: Are you known as someone people come to with their pain — or do they hesitate, because they know you’ll move quickly to fixing? Ask yourself honestly: am I a safe place?
Bring it to Jesus: Ask Him: “Who in my life needs me to feel their pain before I speak into it? And where do I need to stop reaching for answers and simply bring my own weight to You first?” Sit with whatever name or face comes to mind.
Trust the Gardener: Fruit that nourishes others doesn’t grow from trying harder to be compassionate. It grows from remaining in the One who entered every human pain and still chose love. You can’t give what you haven’t received. Stay close to Him. Trust the Gardener.
🙏 PRAYER
Father, thank You for speaking through Your Word today. I want to be someone whose words bring relief, not more weight. Grow in me the patience to understand before I advise — to feel before I speak. Where I’ve caused hurt by responding too quickly, give me the humility to go back. And where I’m carrying my own pain right now, help me bring it to You first — before I try to help anyone else. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
💡 MEMORY VERSE
Proverbs 15:23 (NIV) — “A person finds joy in giving an apt reply — and how good is a timely word!”
This post is part of the Abide in Him Daily devotional series — reading Scripture through the lens of John 15:1–17. The branch doesn’t manufacture the fruit. It bears it because it stays connected to the Vine.
