Ep 89: Suffering Well (GH)

What happens when we suffer alone? In this Greenhouse discussion, Brian Fisher, Kyle Moody, and Dr. Tim Boswell continue the conversation from Episode 88 by exploring suffering, authenticity, community, and the slow work of becoming more like Jesus. Each of them reflects on recent seasons of pain, including physical illness, family struggles, financial pressure, uncertainty, and concern for children. The conversation considers how modern Christian communities sometimes respond to suffering with quick verses, easy answers, or spiritual clichés. While Scripture is true and deeply important, pain often needs more than a Romans 8:28 “bomb.” It needs presence, compassion, honesty, lament, and people willing to sit with us in the ache.

BY Brian Fisher

April 11, 2024

how to suffer well

SHARE THIS PODCAST

Search

Ut dapibus massa eu libero molestie, eu vulputate risus dapibus. Phasellus dictum mi quis laoreet bibendum. Nunc sit amet venenatis massa. Nullam vel urna magna. Nulla porttitor lorem vel tristique commodo. Sed malesuada sagittis luctus. Praesent faucibus nulla vel turpis cursus blandit. Donec vitae lectus vel ex volutpat aliquam.

Kingdom of God
Soil and Roots
Ep 89: Suffering Well (GH)
Loading
/

You Don’t Have to Suffer Alone

Brian, Kyle, and Doc come together to explore Episode 88, explaining and debating what it means to “suffer well.” Each shares some of their journey of suffering, while stressing the need for ongoing kindness, compassion, and a long-term commitment to each other in our formative communities.

And Kyle, the king of cultural references, struggles to use one from this century.

Let’s dig in!

This episode continues the discussion from Ep 88.

Continue the Journey

Season Summary Page

Related article

ICON
Is God good

Doubting God’s Goodness (GH) | Ep 143

What do we do when we find ourselves doubting God’s goodness?

In this Greenhouse episode, Brian and Doc continue the conversation from Episode 142 by exploring one of the most difficult tensions in deep discipleship: how to affirm God’s goodness while honestly grieving the pain, injustice, and suffering of the world. Doc brings his own struggle into the conversation, naming the friction between experiencing God’s kindness in his own life and seeing deep suffering in the lives of others.

This episode is not a philosophical defense of God’s goodness. It is a conversation about lament, authenticity, doubt, secure attachment, and the kind of community where people can bring their rawest questions without being rushed, corrected, or shamed. Brian and Doc explore why modern church culture often struggles with lament, why easy answers can fail the heart, and why the deeper question beneath “Is God good?” may be a cry for withness.

Read more
Is God good

Ep 142: Is God Good? The Hidden Doubt Many of Us Carry

Is God good, and do our hearts actually experience Him that way?

In Episode 142, Brian continues Season 7, The Good Life, by exploring one of the most powerful hidden ideas many followers of Jesus carry: the suspicion that God may not actually be good. We may consciously affirm God’s goodness, love, mercy, and faithfulness, yet our lived experience can tell another story.

Drawing from the Soil & Roots distinction between beliefs and ideas, Brian explores how hidden assumptions about God are formed through suffering, disappointment, family systems, trauma, illness, and repeated experiences. The episode considers how distrust of God’s goodness often shows up through the Eight Indicators: control, anxiety, resentment toward reality, and difficulty receiving love.

Read more
what is God like

Ep 141: The Most Important Thing About Us: Our Hidden Ideas About God (GH)

What if your view of God shapes everything?

In this Greenhouse episode, Brian and Doc continue the conversation from Episode 140 on what God is really like and why our deepest ideas of God matter so much. Season 7, Deep Calls to Deep, is exploring how we become people of depth — people who are increasingly attuned to God, others, themselves, and the world.

The conversation begins with Richard Foster’s claim that the world does not need more talented or intelligent people as much as it needs deep people. But becoming deep is not always safe, comfortable, or tidy. The inward journey can involve pruning, tearing, fire, pain, and the slow process of being unmade and remade by God’s goodness.

Brian and Doc then explore how our view of God becomes the root system beneath nearly every other view we hold. Our theology shapes our philosophy, our politics, our view of creation, our understanding of the sacred and secular, and even how we think about suffering, the church, and the Bible.

Read more