Why Suffering Changes Us
- Chris Cahill
- May 18
- 4 min read
Few things shape human beings more deeply than suffering.
Pain has the power to:
humble,
soften,
harden,
awaken,
destroy,
transform,
or completely redefine a person’s life.
Suffering changes how people see:
themselves,
others,
God,
meaning,
love,
and reality itself.
And perhaps one of the deepest questions humanity wrestles with is not simply:“Why do we suffer?”
But:“What does suffering do to us?”
Because pain does not merely hurt physically or emotionally.
It reshapes the soul.
Suffering Interrupts the Illusion of Control
Human beings naturally seek stability and predictability.
Psychologists understand that people create routines, goals, identities, and systems partly to feel safe and in control.
But suffering disrupts that illusion quickly.
Illness.
Loss.
Trauma.
Grief.
Failure.
Death.
Pain reminds people how fragile life truly is.
And while that realization can feel terrifying, it can also awaken deeper honesty about what truly matters.
Pain Often Reveals What Was Hidden
Suffering has a way of exposing things people normally avoid:
unresolved wounds,
fear,
pride,
insecurity,
loneliness,
dependency,
and emotional fragility.
Psychologists note that adversity often strips away defense mechanisms people use to protect identity and ego.
In painful seasons, people frequently confront themselves more honestly than ever before.
This is why suffering can become either:
deeply transformative,
or deeply destructive.
Pain itself does not automatically create wisdom.
But it often creates opportunity for awakening.
Grief Reveals the Depth of Love
One reason suffering hurts so deeply is because attachment matters profoundly.
People grieve because they loved.
Because connection mattered.
Because relationship shaped identity.
Psychologists understand that close relationships become neurologically and emotionally woven into the self.
Loss can therefore feel like losing part of one’s own existence.
And yet grief also reveals something beautiful:human beings are capable of extraordinary love.
Perhaps grief is painful precisely because love is real.
The Bible Never Pretends Suffering Is Easy
Scripture does not sanitize pain.
The Psalms are filled with:
lament,
confusion,
grief,
anger,
and unanswered questions.
Job wrestles with suffering intensely.
Jesus Himself wept.
“My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” (Matthew 27:46)
That verse matters deeply.
Because Christianity does not present a God detached from suffering.
It presents a God willing to enter it.
The cross itself becomes the ultimate symbol of divine solidarity with human pain.
Suffering Can Deepen Compassion
People who suffer deeply often become more compassionate toward others.
Why?
Because pain dismantles simplistic judgment.
It humbles certainty.
People who once judged quickly may suddenly understand:
anxiety,
grief,
addiction,
depression,
loneliness,
or despair differently after experiencing their own wounds.
Psychologists call this post-traumatic growth—the phenomenon where some individuals develop greater empathy, wisdom, resilience, or meaning through suffering.
Pain can soften the heart.
Though tragically, it can also harden it if left unresolved.
Some Suffering Creates Existential Awakening
Many people begin asking deeper spiritual questions only after suffering disrupts ordinary life.
Pain strips away distraction.
Suddenly people ask:
What matters most?
Who truly loves me?
What gives life meaning?
Is there hope beyond suffering?
Is God present in pain?
Comfort often numbs existential reflection.
Suffering awakens it.
C.S. Lewis famously wrote:
“Pain insists upon being attended to.”
And perhaps suffering forces people to confront truths they would otherwise ignore indefinitely.
Humans Often Grow Most in Difficult Seasons
Psychologists consistently note that adversity can produce profound growth when people process pain meaningfully.
People often emerge from suffering with:
deeper gratitude,
greater humility,
clearer priorities,
emotional maturity,
and stronger compassion.
Not because suffering itself is inherently good.
But because hardship often strips away illusions and exposes what truly matters.
Romans says:
“Suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope.” (Romans 5:3-4)
That does not glorify pain.
It acknowledges transformation can emerge through it.
Suffering Can Also Break People
It is important to speak honestly:not all suffering automatically leads to growth.
Trauma can deeply wound people psychologically and spiritually.
Pain can create:
bitterness,
despair,
numbness,
fear,
isolation,
or hopelessness.
This is why healing matters.
Support matters.
Compassion matters.
Human beings were never meant to carry suffering entirely alone.
Galatians says:
“Carry each other’s burdens.” (Galatians 6:2)
Community matters profoundly during pain.
Jesus Did Not Offer Shallow Answers to Suffering
One striking thing about Jesus is how rarely He offered simplistic explanations for pain.
He did not reduce suffering into clichés.
Instead, He often responded with:
presence,
healing,
tears,
compassion,
and solidarity.
“Jesus wept.” (John 11:35)
Perhaps one reason that verse resonates so deeply is because it reveals:God does not stand emotionally distant from human suffering.
He enters it.
Feels it.
Grieves it.
That changes the emotional meaning of pain profoundly.
Suffering Often Reorders Priorities
Pain frequently changes what people value.
Things once considered important suddenly feel shallow.
People often become more aware of:
relationships,
time,
love,
beauty,
stillness,
and presence.
Mortality clarifies priorities.
Psychologists consistently note that people facing suffering or death often report greater appreciation for:
connection,
meaning,
and ordinary moments.
Pain strips away illusion.
And sometimes reveals what was sacred all along.
The Cross Reframes Human Suffering
Christianity does not claim suffering disappears.
It claims suffering is not meaningless.
The cross becomes central because it declares:God enters human pain personally.
Not abstractly.
Personally.
Jesus suffers betrayal.
Loss.
Physical agony.
Grief.
Abandonment.
And Christians believe resurrection means suffering and death are not the final reality.
Hope still exists beyond pain.
The Invitation Beyond Despair
Perhaps suffering changes us because pain forces human beings to confront what truly matters.
Love.
Meaning.
Connection.
Hope.
Grace.
Presence.
Perhaps suffering strips away illusions and reveals the soul more honestly than comfort ever could.
Not because suffering itself is holy.
But because human beings often awaken most deeply when life breaks open.
And maybe the deepest spiritual truth hidden within suffering is this:
we are not alone in it.
Not abandoned.
Not unseen.
Not forgotten.
Because Christianity claims that even in humanity’s darkest pain, God does not remain distant.
He enters the suffering with us.
And somehow, through love, even brokenness can become part of transformation.





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