— Learning Compassion in the Shadow of Loss
đ I grew up in a world marked by hardship. Poverty was my first teacherâstern, unyielding, but deeply influential. It taught me discipline, resilience, and the kind of determination that only comes from experiencing lack. I threw myself into my studies, convinced that education was the one path that could take me beyond the boundaries of my childhood. With unwavering resolve, I paved a straight and steady road for myself.
Despite the harshness of those early years, my adult life took a completely different path. From earning a PhD to becoming a tenured full professor, my professional journey developed with clarity and momentum I never imagined as a child.
đ However, because of that path, I also missed certain life experiences. I never waited tables, never worked a cash register, and never lived the everyday American life that so many around me know intimately. In some ways, this left me with a gapâan understanding I lacked, a part of the world I couldnât fully grasp.
𼲠My husbandâs passing changed everything. When he struggled with deep anxiety, I didnât fully understand how serious his struggles were. I was too proud, too confident, and too focused on my own idea of being âspiritual.â The religious spirit blinded me. I blamed myself, hated myself, and have been unable to forgive myself.Â
âłď¸ Looking back, it feels as if his loss shattered something in me that desperately needed to break. His death became a painful awakeningâa turning point that forced me to learn compassion in the most heartbreaking way.
đ The Sacred Call of Compassion: A Biblical Reflection
Compassion is more than just a feelingâit’s a perspective, a way of living, and a form of loving that reflects God’s very nature. Throughout Scripture, compassion remains one of the most meaningful expressions of divine character. It is present in every story of mercy, every act of healing, and every command to love one another. To practice compassion is not only to be kind; it is to reflect the image of the One who âis gracious and compassionate, slow to anger and abounding in loveâ (Psalm 145:8).
đ Compassion Begins with Godâs Heart
The Bible shows us that compassion comes not from human goodness but from God’s very nature. When the Lord revealed His character to Moses, His first words describing Himself were full of empathy: âThe Lord, the Lord, the compassionate and gracious GodâŚâ (Exodus 34:6).
This divine compassion is not distant or abstract. It is active, responsive, and deeply personal. God sees the suffering of His people, hears their cries, and moves toward them. Time and again, Scripture tells us that Godâs compassion results in actionârescue, healing, forgiveness, and presence.
đ Jesus: The Perfect Embodiment of Compassion
In the New Testament, compassion becomes real through Jesus. Time and again, the Gospels show Him moved by others’ pain.
- âWhen He saw the crowds, He had compassion on themâŚâ (Matthew 9:36).
- âHe had compassion on them and healed their sick.â (Matthew 14:14).
- âJesus wept.â (John 11:35).
Jesusâ compassion was not just pity. It was a deep, soul-level awareness of human suffering combined with a fierce desire to help. He reached out to the untouchable, welcomed the rejected, fed the hungry, and comforted the grieving. His compassion broke social boundaries and redefined what love looks like in action.
đ Compassion as a Command
Scripture presents compassion as a necessity, not a choice, for all who follow God.
Paulâs words in Colossians directly address our calling:
âClothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and patience.â (Colossians 3:12)
To âclotheâ ourselves with compassion means to wear it every day, intentionally and openly. Itâs not something we only show when itâs easy. Instead, it becomes part of who we areâwoven into the fabric of our interactions, choices, and responses.
The parable of the Good Samaritan further expands this call. Jesus asks us not only to feel compassion but to cross the road, interrupt our routines, and step into anotherâs suffering. Compassion is love in motion.
đ Compassion in a Fractured World
In a world often marked by division, hurry, and indifference, compassion is a radical act. It requires us to slow down and genuinely see othersâtheir humanity, their pain, their worth. It calls us to soften our hearts when life pushes us to harden them. Compassion becomes a spiritual discipline: a choice to respond as God responds to us.
As Paul writes,
âBe kind and compassionate to one another, forgiving each other, just as in Christ God forgave you.â (Ephesians 4:32)
Compassion starts in the heart but must translate into action: listening to someone who is grieving, helping someone who is struggling, extending grace when anger would be easier, and offering presence when solutions are impossible.
đ The Transformative Power of Compassion
When we practice compassion, we do more than comfort othersâwe are changed ourselves. Compassion reduces bitterness, heals hidden wounds, and brings us closer to Godâs heart. It reminds us that love is not counted by grand gestures but by everyday acts of mercy.
Most importantly, compassion keeps us humble. It reminds us that everyone bears unseen struggles, and showing kindness always matters.
đ Final Remarks
Compassion is the language of Godâs love written into human action. To live with compassion is to live out the gospelâquietly, steadily, faithfully. It is to join God in His ongoing work of healing a broken world.
May we take to heart the words of Micah 6:8:
âWhat does the Lord require of you? To act justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God.â
Compassion isn’t just a command; it’s a giftâone that brings light to darkness, hope to despair, and love to pain. When we offer compassion, we mirror the One who has shown boundless compassion to us all.
