Preaching to the Grieving: What People in Pain Most Need to Hear
Every congregation contains people who are actively grieving. Not grieving in the past tense — not the grief processed and resolved into testimony — but currently, acutely, presently in the middle of loss. The person who lost their mother three weeks ago. The couple whose marriage is disintegrating in the pew beside the children they are trying to keep unaware. The man who got the diagnosis last Tuesday. These people are in the room every Sunday. They are often invisible — grief is private, and most Sunday services create little space for it to be acknowledged. But they are there, and what they most need from the preaching is worth the pastor's sustained attention.
The grieving person does not primarily need information — more facts about the sovereignty of God, more theological frameworks for understanding suffering, more arguments for why Romans 8:28 applies to their specific situation. They may need some of this eventually. In the acute season of grief, information tends to function as distance management rather than genuine comfort — it keeps the preacher and the theology safely abstract while the actual pain remains unaddressed.
What Grieving People Actually Need
What grieving people most need from preaching is the sense that the faith they are trying to hold has been in the place they are currently standing — and has found God there. Not found resolution there, not found immediate relief there, but found the God who is present in the darkness as well as the light, who accompanies people through the valley rather than removing them from it, who is not absent when the sense of his presence has withdrawn.
"The grieving person needs to know that the faith they are clinging to has been in the dark before them — and found the God who is in the dark."
Preaching After Congregational Tragedy
The grieving person also does not need premature resolution — the pivot to resurrection hope before the grief has been genuinely honored, the rush to "but God" before the "and yet" has been fully inhabited. The move toward hope is real and necessary and genuinely pastoral. The timing matters enormously. The lament of the psalmist is allowed to be fully itself before the psalmist arrives at trust; the preacher who collapses the journey by going straight to the destination has not understood what the grieving person needs from the journey.
The specific scriptural resources that speak to grief with genuine honesty — the lament psalms, the book of Job, Lamentations, the garden of Gethsemane, the cross itself — are among the most powerful resources available for pastoral preaching to the grieving. They communicate not through argument but through solidarity: the Word of God has been where you are. The faith that sustains you has a history in the darkness. You are not alone in this, and you are not outside the story that the Scripture tells. When a tragedy has struck the specific congregation, this sermon is often best when it is simple. The grief does not need complexity; it needs genuine presence. Allow yourself to be moved. It is pastoral. It is human. And it is one of the most honest things you will ever say from the pulpit.
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