The God Who Enters Our Pain

He Suffers With Us: The God Who Enters Pain

What the Incarnation teaches us about God’s presence in our suffering

Pain has a way of isolating us. It convinces us that we’re alone. That no one understands. And if we’re not careful, even our theology can reinforce that lie.

Many of us affirm that Jesus is “with us” when we suffer. But if we’re honest, we often carry a subtle belief that He’s more like a sympathetic bystander—nearby, but not involved. Present, but untouched. Watching, not weeping. I struggle with this view of God myself. I know intellectually it’s not true—but my heart still has a long way to go in fully believing it.

The gospel tells a different story.
A much more beautiful one.



Jesus Enters Our Suffering: The Incarnation in Pain

If Jesus is only an observer of our suffering, then what comfort is He really offering? If He stands at a distance, arms crossed or maybe tearful, but ultimately unaffected—would that not be cruel? This is the argument that those who want nothing to do with Jesus often make, and I think the Church has maybe missed an opportunity to reframe this view. 

Scripture, and the story of the Incarnation itself, shows us a God who does the unthinkable:
He steps into our suffering.
He takes it on.
He makes it His own.

“Surely He took up our pain and bore our suffering.” Isaiah 53:4
Just a few verses later, Isaiah adds: “The LORD has laid on him the iniquity of us all.”
(Isaiah 53:6)

The Incarnation isn’t just a theological necessity—it’s a relational rescue. It’s a relational rescue.
God didn’t send help from a safe distance. He became flesh. Fragile, vulnerable, human.
He took on a body that could bruise, a heart that could break, and emotions that could overwhelm.

He chose suffering—not as a cosmic experiment, but as an act of love.
Because only love is willing to feel what another feels.
Only love moves that close.


The Cross Is More Than Atonement—It’s Identification

We often talk about Jesus’ suffering on the cross in transactional terms: He paid the price for sin. And yes, that’s gloriously true. But it’s not the whole story.

The cross isn’t just a payment.
It’s a revelation.

The Crucified Christ is God’s answer to the problem of pain—not by explaining it away, but by experiencing it fully.

“A God who cannot suffer is poorer than any human.”
Jürgen Moltmann, The Crucified God

In Jesus, we don’t just see a God who forgives sin—we see a God who bleeds.
Who weeps.
Who cries out, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” (Matthew 27:46)

This is not divine detachment.
This is solidarity.

And it changes everything.


Your Suffering Is Not Evidence of God’s Absence

We often assume that pain is something to get past before God shows up again. That He’s waiting on the other side of our healing, ready to bless us once we’ve “learned our lesson.”

But Scripture offers a radically different picture.

“We do not have a high priest who is unable to empathize with our weaknesses, but one who has been tempted in every way, just as we are…”
Hebrews 4:15

Jesus is not shocked by your sadness.
He’s not rolling His eyes at your anxiety.
He’s not grading your grief.

He’s with you in it.
Even when you can’t feel Him.
Especially then.

“He was despised and rejected… a man of suffering, and familiar with pain.”
Isaiah 53:3

Familiar with pain. Not just conceptually. Personally. Experientially.


Why the Incarnation Matters for Suffering and Spiritual Formation

Early church father Gregory of Nazianzus wrote, “That which He has not assumed He has not healed.”
If Jesus had not taken on real, embodied suffering, our pain would remain a chasm between us and God.

But because He did, our suffering becomes a meeting place—not a barrier.

This is the sacred paradox of Christianity:
We’re formed in the furnace.
We meet Jesus in the wilderness.
We grow in the ache.

“I want to know Christ—yes, to know the power of his resurrection and participation in his sufferings…”
Philippians 3:10


Why the Church Must Recover Honest, Gospel-Centered Storytelling

Here’s where this gets practical—especially if you’re in ministry.

Whether you preach, disciple, lead, or fundraise, the way you talk about suffering matters. Because if we believe that Jesus shares in our pain, then our storytelling should reflect that.

Too often, Christian testimony is edited for clarity and packaged for appeal. In fact, we’ve found that in the vast majority of cases, the Church isn’t telling stories at all. Most ministry content today is built around information, education, or instruction—but not transformation. And without story, transformation rarely takes root. What’s missing isn’t creativity or even strategy—it’s a theological commitment to vulnerability. A willingness to linger in the ache and reveal how God meets us there. We highlight the miracle but edit out the mourning.


We celebrate the breakthrough but skip the breakdown.

But Jesus shows up in the middle of the story—not just the ending.

This is more than a metaphor—it’s a narrative truth that mirrors the structure of the human experience. If we look at the Hero’s Journey, particularly as adapted in Dan Harmon’s story circle, the beginning of any transformation starts not with triumph, but with tension. Step 1 is the known world—”you.” Step 2 is “need”—where something is off, broken, painful, or missing. This is the point where the ache enters, and the story begins. Not at the mountaintop, but in the valley.

So when we say Jesus meets us in the middle of the story, we’re also saying He meets us at the beginning of our need. At the first pang of loss. At the first crack in our confidence. At the very moment the story starts to unfold. Because that’s where transformation takes root. And more than that—Jesus isn’t just meeting us there, He’s inviting us into it.

This is the call to adventure. The summons that so often comes through disruption, ache, or longing. Jesus doesn’t only comfort us in suffering; He calls us into a path that will include it—knowing it’s through that journey that we will come to know Him more deeply. The pain isn’t a detour. It’s part of the path. It’s where relationship is forged, not just revealed.

As we explored in our previous reflection on suffering in Why Does God Allow Suffering & Pain?, this invitation is about intimacy.

To dig even deeper into how suffering draws us into relationship with Jesus—not just comfort—watch this conversation:
Embracing Suffering on the Journey to Intimacy with Jesus.

We come to know Christ not just in His power, but in His pain. And it all starts with His call—not to comfort, but to companionship through the cross.

“The crucifixion is the touchstone of Christian authenticity… because it is the ultimate act of God’s solidarity with the powerless and the suffering.”
Fleming Rutledge

We need to tell stories where the pain isn’t resolved quickly. Where grief lingers. Where questions remain unanswered.
Because that’s real life.
And that’s where Jesus is.


The Wounded Healer: Why Your Pain Might Be Part of Your Ministry

Henri Nouwen described true spiritual leadership this way:

“Nobody escapes being wounded… The question is not ‘How can we hide our wounds?’ but ‘How can we put our woundedness in the service of others?’”

Your scars may be the most sacred part of your story—not because God caused them, but because He meets you there—and experiences it with you. That’s the whole point of this reflection: Jesus doesn’t simply acknowledge our pain from afar; He feels it in His own flesh, and refuses to leave us alone in it.

When we stop hiding our wounds, the Church becomes what it was always meant to be:
Not a showroom for the perfect, but a hospital for the broken.

A place where pain is named.
Where suffering is shared.
Where Christ is found.


Even in This—He Is With You

Maybe you’re in the thick of it right now.

Read more on how suffering leads to intimacy with Christ in this related article.
Maybe nothing feels redemptive.
Maybe you’re tired of trying to find the “lesson.”

Hear this:
Jesus is not standing outside your pain.
He’s not timing your tears or testing your faith.
He’s right there, weeping with you.
Feeling it in His own chest.

“We live in a culture that is terrified of suffering because it has no redemptive framework for it.”
Dallas Willard

But Christian, hear me—we have a framework.
We follow a Wounded Healer.
A God who does not avoid pain—but enters it.

And when we suffer with Him, we are never more like Christ—nor more with Him.


From Theology to Practice: Why This Matters in Ministry

If the gospel is a story of God entering human pain, then our ministries must tell stories that do the same. Whether you’re forming disciples, developing leaders, serving vulnerable communities, or walking with people in spiritual formation—your ability to name suffering and reflect Christ’s presence in it is what makes your ministry authentic and transformative.

Too often, we only celebrate the outcome: the healing, the breakthrough, the resolved testimony. But the Church needs stories that dwell in the middle. Stories that hold tension. Stories that carry the ache. Because that’s where Jesus is. And that’s where people learn to trust Him.

At Reliant Creative, we help ministries uncover and tell these kinds of stories. Stories that don’t just inspire—but disciple. Stories that reflect the Incarnation, not just the resurrection.

If you’re serving in one of these spaces, we’d love to come alongside you:


Learn more about how this approach shapes your ministry:


FAQ

What does the Incarnation teach us about suffering?

The Incarnation shows that God did not remain distant from human pain. In Jesus, God entered our world, experienced suffering firsthand, and transformed pain into a place of encounter rather than abandonment.

Is suffering a sign that God is absent?

No. Scripture presents Jesus as a Savior who empathizes with our weaknesses (Hebrews 4:15). Christian theology teaches that God is often most present in the midst of suffering, even when His presence is difficult to feel.

Why is the cross more than a payment for sin?

While the cross accomplishes atonement, it also reveals God’s identification with human suffering. The crucifixion demonstrates divine solidarity with the broken and the hurting.

How does suffering shape spiritual formation?

Christian formation often happens through hardship. Scripture repeatedly shows that believers grow in intimacy with Christ as they share in His sufferings (Philippians 3:10).

Why should ministries talk honestly about suffering?

Honest storytelling reflects the gospel more accurately than polished testimonies that skip pain. Real stories of struggle and faith help people trust God and see how He works in the middle of the journey.

How can personal pain become part of ministry?

Many Christian leaders discover that their wounds become places of empathy and connection. When shared with wisdom and humility, these experiences can help others encounter Christ in their own suffering.

Why does God allow suffering?

While Scripture doesn’t offer a simplistic answer, it does show us that God does not remain distant from our pain. In the person of Jesus, He entered into suffering and transformed it from within. Suffering becomes a place of encounter, not abandonment. For more, see our reflection on Why Does God Allow Suffering & Pain?

Where is God when I’m suffering?

Scripture shows that God does not stay distant from our pain. In the person of Jesus, He entered into it and continues to meet us there.

How does storytelling help with discipleship?

Storytelling reveals the tension, doubt, and breakthrough of real transformation. It invites people into a deeper, more honest walk with Jesus—something sermons and lessons alone often can’t do.

About the Author:

Picture of Zach Leighton

Zach Leighton

Zach Leighton has been working with Christian ministries and nonprofits for over a decade, helping them tell their stories and testify of God's redemptive work. He has done extensive work applying The Hero's Journey as a framework that can be used in a wide range of ministry maketing applications. When he's not working directly to serve ministry clients, as the Principal Creative at Reliant, he spends much of his time developing strategy and casting vision for the ministry of Reliant.

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