Introduction
  Repeat series theme: Lament Psalms teach us how to relate to  God when we are in pain so that we can lay hold of the help he wants to give  us.
  Ps. 42,43 is one of several Psalms about a specific kind of pain  known only to true Christians/believers—the pain of God’s “hiddenness.”  Read Ps. 42.   Woven throughout this Psalm is a description of this pain, its attending  factors, and how to respond to it.
The pain of God’s hiddenness
  Re-read 42:1,2.  The deer  metaphor (42:1a) illustrates what he describes in 42:1b,2.  His soul is wilting because the sense of  God’s loving presence has left him.  He  can’t sense God as a living God, he  can’t see God’s face (see  Num.6:26-28)—and he doesn’t know why.   He is “going to the places” where he normally experiences God’s love—but  God isn’t meeting him there.  To switch  illustrations, the sunshine of God’s loving presence has been inexplicably  hidden by a thick cloud.  
  
    So the pain of God’s hiddenness is the inexplicable loss of the sense of God’s loving presence.  There are at least three reasons why God’s  hiddenness is explicable:
    
      First, God’s loving presence may be hidden from you because you  have never received his forgiveness through faith in his Son Jesus Christ.  Our sins cause a separation between us and  God that only Jesus atoning death can overcome.   That’s why when you receive God’s forgiveness through Jesus, he sends  his Spirit into your heart so that you can personally experience his love for  you (Rom.5:5; 8:16; EXAMPLES).  If  you have never experienced God’s love for you, you do not have God’s Spirit,  and you do not belong to Christ (Rom.8:9).  You can change that this morning...
      Second, you can lose the sense of God’s loving presence as a  true Christian by adopting a rebellious attitude toward God’s moral leadership  of your life.  This is what David  experienced in Ps.32:3,4.  Personal  intimacy with God is contingent to a heart that is yielded to his leadership  (Jn. 14:21,23).  If you are a Christian  but feel chronically distant from God, do you have a moral controversy with  him?  Submit to him—and he will draw near  to you again!
      Third, you can lose the sense of God’s loving presence simply  because you don’t regularly draw near to him through prayer and meditation on  his Word.  These are the means through  which he reveals his presence to us.
    
    All true believers experience  this pain at times.  Some have more than  others, some of these times are deeper and/or longer than others, etc.—but all  have them.  This is one of several such Psalms (see Ps.63;  88) and many other biblical passages  (e.g., Lam.3).  This is the  testimony of every seasoned Christian  servant.   I certainly have my share of this kind of  pain.  So you’d better expect this (“Forewarned  is forearmed”) and learn how to navigate through them!
  
Attending factors
  The specific reason for God’s hiddenness is mysterious—at  least at the time.  We can talk more  about what some of these reasons might be during Q & A.  But part of navigating through this pain is understanding  the factors that make you more vulnerable to it and that aggravate it.  This man mentions two of these factors:
  
    Read 42:4,6.  He is isolated  from his spiritual friends and interrupted from his normal spiritual life with  them.  He is used to being in Jerusalem  and involved regularly with the community of believers in praying, hearing  God’s Word, etc.  For reasons that he  doesn’t explain, he is now way up in north Israel and (evidently) without  spiritual companions.  He knows that this  is somehow connected to the pain of God’s hiddenness (42:4 “for”). 
    
      This is one of many biblical passages that emphasizes our need  for community with serious Christians in order to have a healthy experiential life  with God.  Our American culture of  hyper-individualism tells us that there is no relationship between Christian  community and individual closeness with God—but this is a lie.  
      
        Much of the sense of God’s presence comes through  fellowshipping with, studying with, praying with other Christians.  This is the way God set it up, and he’s not  going to change the rules for you and me!   If you neglect this, you will suffer needless deprivation of the sense of  God’s presence (EXAMPLES).  
        Also, the pain of God’s hiddenness is aggravated when you are  isolated, because you are much more vulnerable to misinterpreting it as God’s  rejection.  So build a lifestyle around  Christian community, and draw near to your Christian friends when you suffer  the pain of God’s hiddenness!
      
    
    The other attending factor is those who are accusing God to him  (read 42:3,10).  These people are not  physical enemies—that are not pursuing him to kill him (as in a lot of other  Psalms).  But they don’t know God, and  they keep asking him: “Where is your God?”   This is not an information-seeking question from sincere seekers—this is  an accusation that God has abandoned him, that God is powerless to help him,  that the object of his faith is not real, etc.   And these words are agonizing to him because this is precisely what his own heart is telling him.
    
      Our spiritual enemy, Satan, loves to accuse God to us.  Just when God seems “hidden,” he piles on by causing  thoughts to emerge in your minds that God does not exist, or that God doesn’t  care about you, or that God is impotent to help you.
      Sometimes, people become Satan’s unwitting mouthpieces.  It is not mere coincidence that just when you  are wrestling with the pain of God’s hiddenness, a spouse or work associate or  old friend or professor will suggest that you are taking God way too seriously,  or raise an objection to your faith that you don’t know how to answer, etc.  Especially if you are isolated and/or if you  keep these thoughts to yourself, you can feel defenseless before the  hammer-blows of their unbelief.
    
  
How to respond
  But there is a way  to respond constructively.  This man  shows us how he responds to this pain in a way that begins to lead him out of it.   The essence of his response is that he talks.  That is, he talks to two  different people in two very different ways.   If you want to overcome the pain of God’s hiddenness, you have to do  this.  You can’t be silent, and you can’t  talk to just one of these people—you have to talk to both.
  
    On the one hand, you have to talk to God very openly about how  much this pain hurts.  That’s what this  man does.  He refuses to accept this  state as normal.  Instead, he runs like a  small child in pain to his parent.  He  openly laments the loss of God’s loving presence (42:1,2,9; 43:2a).  And he openly asks God to restore his loving  presence (43:3,4).  This is supplication—pouring the pain in your  heart out before God.
    
      This has been a big challenge for me over the years.  My macho upbringing told me this is weak and  shameful, and many older Christians gave me the impression that this is  unspiritual.  And my self-sufficient  pride found this appealing.  But that’s  not what the Bible says.  Jesus did this  in the Garden of Gethsemane, and he asked his closest friends to be with him  while he did this (but they fell asleep instead, so he had to do it by  himself).  What makes me think that I am  stronger than Jesus?  This is a big  reason why God gave me his Spirit (Rom.8:15).
      Do you do this?  If you  don’t, you may dull the pain of God’s hiddenness—but it may become chronic  because you won’t let him comfort you.   You may come to wrongly believe that this stoic state is normal.  You may become cynical about the whole notion  of experiencing God’s loving presence as the “home base” of your Christian  life.  This is a big price to pay for not  being willing to talk openly to God about your pain!
    
    On the other hand, you have to also talk to yourself very aggressively  about how you interpret the pain of God’s hiddenness.  That’s what this man did.  Yes, he poured out his pain to God—but also  spoke aggressively to his own soul about the conclusions it was drawing.  This is the three-fold refrain of Ps. 42  & 43 (read 42:5).  His questions  (“Why are you in despair?  Why have you  become disturbed within me”) are not information-seeking questions—they are  disagreements, even reproofs.  He can’t necessarily  help that he feels this way, but he disagrees that these feelings are an  accurate assessment of the situation because of what God has revealed about his  character.   He reminds himself: “My God is a faithful God—so  He will not leave me here; He will see me through this painful period  and He will restore the joy of his  presence.”  On this basis, he calls on  himself to go on trusting God (“Hope in God”).
    
      This is very counter-cultural, because our culture teaches us  that our feelings are a reliable guide.   But the Bible says that our feelings are fallen and therefore  unreliable.  Uncritically believing your  feelings is a good way to ruin your life, your marriage, your sanity!  If we can’t follow our feelings uncritically,  what do we do with them?  We must  evaluate our feelings by what God says!
      Listen to how D. M. Lloyd-Jones explains this crucial truth:  “The main trouble in this whole matter ... is this, that we allow  our self to talk to us instead of talking to our  self...Take those thoughts that come to you the moment  you wake up in the morning.  You have not  originated them, but they start talking to you, they bring back the problems of  yesterday, etc.  Somebody is  talking.  Who is talking to you?  Your self is talking to you.  Now this man's treatment was this: instead of  allowing this self to talk to him, he starts talking to himself.  ‘Why are you cast down, O my soul?’ he  asks.  His soul had been depressing him,  crushing him.  So he stands up and says:  ‘Self, listen for moment, I will speak to you.’...You have to  take yourself in hand, you have to address yourself, preach to yourself,  question yourself... instead of muttering in this depressed,  unhappy way.  And then you must go on to  remind yourself of God, who God is... and what God has done,  and what God has pledged himself to do... We must stand up as  this man did and say: ‘Why are you cast down? Why are you disquieted within  me?’...instead of listening placidly to him and  allowing him to drag you down and depress you.   For that is what he will always do if you allow him to be in control.” 
      As Christians, we should be able to talk to ourselves this way more  effectively than he could, because we have greater promises (Rom.8:32).  Because Jesus was willing to take our sins on  himself and be forsaken in our place (“My God, why have you forsaken me?”), God  can promise to those who belong to Jesus: “I will never leave you or forsake  you.”  This is the Rock on which we  stand!
    
    If you pour your heart out to God and preach this to  yourself this way, you will eventually get out of the trough.  You can see hope beginning to rekindle in  this man’s heart after talking in this way (read 42:6-8).  As he “remembers” God in this way, he  realizes that God has taken him through similar periods before (“Your breakers  and Your waves have rolled over  me”).  God did not abandon him—He was  mysteriously at work through these dark periods for good.  So he has more assurance that God will bring him through this dark period  as well, and that the sunshine of God’s love will break through into his heart again (42:8).
  
DISCUSS: Why might God allow us to go through the pain of his  hiddenness?
  This refining exposes our self-sufficiency and deepens our  trust in God (2Cor.1:9), so that when God grants us revelation  and/or power we give him the glory he deserves instead of stealing it for  ourselves (2Cor.12:7).
  This gives us empathy for suffering people and more authentic  faith with which to encourage them (2Cor.1:3-5).
  This test refutes Satan’s accusation that no one trusts God  without being bribed by his tangible blessings (Job1,2).
  This makes us long for greater intimacy with God in this life  (“Absence makes the heart grow fonder”), and motivates us to seek him in prayer  and biblical meditation.
  This makes us long for full intimacy in heaven, and work  meanwhile to advance his kingdom—grateful for the help he gives us here.
  See for  example Charles Spurgeon’s “The Minister’s Fainting Fits” in Helmut Thielicke, Encounter With Spurgeon .  Martin Luther once was so depressed by God’s  hiddenness that his wife came into his bedroom dressed all in black.  When Luther asked, “Who died?” she replied:  “By the way you have been acting, I thought God died.”
  See for  example God’s deliverance of Israel after years of “hiddenness.”  See Ps.77:7-15; Lam.3:31,32.
  D.M. Lloyd-Jones, Spiritual  Depression: Its Causes and Cure (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans Publishing Co.,  1982), pp. 20,21.