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When I'm "Alone"
by Gretchen Jones

Imagine leaving your job, your family members, your friends, and your belongings to move to a place that was unfamiliar – to a place where you couldn’t speak the language and you only knew acquaintances but had no real friends. Imagine exchanging the known for the unknown, the controlled for the out-of-control. By doing exactly this over 5 years ago, I was choosing to walk down a path of obedience, but it was not necessarily easy! Before I ever left my home in the US, God challenged me by saying that even if I experienced 365 difficult days, I was still called to move to Peru. Of course, I knew that I was more than likely to experience difficult days in that first year and was bound to feel more alone than I ever had before.

How many of you are comfortable with being alone? How do you respond to being alone? To feeling alone? Through my move to Peru, I accepted a position of aloneness. God had called me there. Looking back, I realize that I had to walk through a time of aloneness in order to receive the blessing of community. We would rarely like to admit that. When we recognize we are physically alone, we often scramble to change our circumstances as quickly as possible. We think it is wrong to be alone, causing us to wonder if we took a wrong turn and we must find the road the leads back to lots of people and lots of busyness. However, God has a purpose in aloneness in your life and in mine.

There have been seasons in my life in which I have found myself without a lot of spiritual companions around me. I have had a season of very few Christian friends, a season of grief which few could relate to, and even a season of feeling extremely alone despite being in a large group of people. These were times when I could have easily grown resentful, jealous and bitter. Instead I had to surrender my desires and accept God’s handiwork in my life.

When I think of others who are in a position of aloneness, one of the first that comes to mind is a particular woman that Jesus encountered. In Luke 7, we see Jesus entering the gates of the city of Nain (Luke 7:11), accompanied by his disciples and a large crowd of followers. They were surely rejoicing over the recent healing of the Centurion’s servant (Luke 7:10). Christ exclaimed that, “not even in Israel” had he “found such great faith” when He spoke of the Centurion (Luke 7:9).

Jesus was moved to compassion when He saw the body of a dead man being carried out of the city. The man was the only son of his mother, who was already a widow. Sure, she was also accompanied by a crowd from the city of Nain, but, I imagine she was pondering what life would be like after having lost her husband and now her only son. She was likely wondering how it would feel to be that alone. Jesus was moved to compassion for this woman and He restored life to the dead man after he touched the coffin and spoke, “Young man, I say to you, arise!” (Luke 7:14)

For me, this is a reminder that God cares about our aloneness. He cares enough to have compassion. He cares enough to stop, touch and speak. He cares enough to restore. I have not lost a husband, or a son, but I have experienced losses and loneliness in my life. There have been times I have truly been alone and times I have felt incredibly alone. It was at those times I see God truly had compassion on me and in a sense, brought me back to life.

So why would God allow us to go through seasons of being alone and feeling alone? Why is it something we try so hard to avoid? Do we truly understand aloneness to be something that can truly bless us in our relationship and walk with Christ? When others are taken from our life, we find ourselves relying on, trusting in and drawing close to God all the more. The more time we spend with someone, the deeper we grow in our relationship with them and the more we become like them. A great example of this is found in the friendships we have. The more time spent with a best friend tends to deepen the friendship and often we grow to be similar as we spend more time with that person.

When things are taken from our lives we learn to treasure what remains. We know this to be true when we experience the loss of a loved one, the end of a relationship or a dashed hope. Once we move past the grief of what is lost, we see the value of what remains. When I visited Peru for the very first time, I was struck by how brown Lima looked to me. I had been warned that since Lima is technically in the desert, there was very little green and no flowers grew. For the last several years, I have learned to appreciate small gardens, green parks and the solitary flower I see in front of a home. I have learned to cherish what does exist instead longing for what doesn’t. God also wants us to take time to count our blessings and thank him for the people He has placed in our lives.

Through the times of walking alone, we learn to trust God in a greater way. He is fully aware of our needs and always provides for us in ways that teach us. The words of the song by Matt Redman (Album: Where Angels Fear To Tread, 2002), “Blessed Be Your Name” ring true to this fact.

“You give and take away
You give and take away
My heart will choose to say
Lord, blessed be Your name”


We must cling to the truth that even the people around us are a gift from God. He is the One who has given them to us. But He is also One who can take them away. When our trust is in God, we learn that He chooses who comes in and out of our lives. It becomes less and less about us and more and more about Him. I have had some very special friends in my life who have helped me through difficult times as well as shared joyous times with me. But, some of those very same friends have grown distant. Of course, I long for the times they were close to me, but I have to trust that God has allowed for the distance and that He will provide others in a time of need. I choose to trust God and His gifts of companionship and friendship instead of the people themselves.

The widow of Nain was not the only person to be alone in the Bible. Several others experienced aloneness and several did so by their own choice. Daniel was taken from his family in Jerusalem at a young age and was forced into training and education by a foreign people who worshipped other gods (Daniel 1:1-7). He responded to difficult situations by taking time alone to spend time in prayer (Daniel 2:18, 6:10) and did not always seek out the comfort and advice of spiritual companions. Who do you turn to when you are faced with difficult circumstances?

Being alone is something Jesus sought after in order to spend time in fellowship with the Father. Before He made decisions regarding those who would accompany Him as disciples, Jesus went off to the mountain to pray, He spent the whole night in prayer there (Luke 6:12). After the feeding of the 5,000 Jesus withdrew again to the mountain by Himself to pray (Matthew 14:23, Mark 6:46, John 6:15). He had tried to get away before this event, but the multitudes followed him (Luke 8:10). Although He took a few of the disciples along with Him to the Garden of Gethsemane, He asked them to remain at a distance and keep watch while He went a little beyond them to pray (Matthew 26:39, Luke 22:41). Jesus was teaching us by example that we must have time alone with God in order to commune with Him, especially during crucial moments. Who do you seek when you must make difficult decisions?

Other examples include Hagar was run out of her home by Sarai and was found sitting alone by an angel who encouraged her (Genesis 16:6-7). Moses was exhorted by his father-in-law, Jethro, for taking on a task that was too heavy for him and that he should not be judging all the people alone (Exodus 18:13-26). As well, prophets such as Jonah (Jonah 4:1-5) and Elijah (1 King 19:4) found themselves alone after times of great ministry, although their desire was that of isolation, not necessarily because they were seeking God. What type of refuge do you look for when you are worn out and discouraged?

When we find ourselves alone, we often rush to find a way to fill in the silence. We make a phone call, turn on the television, check the internet, and hit the stores. We will often do anything to avoid time to be by ourselves. This desire often becomes stronger when we come face to face with life’s challenges or tough decisions. Our first instinct is to turn to someone here on Earth, yet it is typically those times He has purposed to draw us closer to Him. Use the opportunity to draw close to God as Jesus did, and trust that He will provide spiritual counselors here on Earth if He chooses to do so.

Although you may desire for God to provide counselors and advisers for you, you may not recognize any here on Earth. Christ was aware of our human desire to not feel alone and abandoned. John records the words Christ spoke as He was preparing for His own death. Knowing that He would no longer be present with the disciples and other followers, Christ reassured them by promising that the Holy Spirit was to come and would be with believers forever (John 14:16). The Spirit was to come to abide with and in us (John 14:17). The Spirit was to act as our teacher (John 14:16) and our guide into all truth (John 16:13). He did not want us to feel abandoned as orphans (John 14:18). The Spirit is with us, in us, and He will guide us into all truth. When it appears that others are not around, the Spirit is there counseling, teaching and guiding.

There is a difference between being alone and feeling alone. There is a difference between drawing close to God and running away from people. Community and fellowship do not exist so we can grow to depend on them but they exist so we can grow within them. In His time, God will call you from the position of aloneness into part of a community – maybe into a physical community, maybe a spiritual community. This may mean taking a risk by joining a small group, meeting with someone one on one, or simply expressing that you have a need to be included. These things are not easy, nor are they comfortable. But when God points us in a direction of community we must embrace it.

As long as you are in a position of aloneness, be reminded that you can trust your Father and Lord to be everything you need and to provide everything that you need. He is aware of your deepest longing and is also aware of your need to grow and to be strengthened in your areas of weakness. Be thankful for friends and counselors that God has provided, whether or not they are presently in your life. The position of aloneness is for a season and just as each season brings forth growth of different kinds, the aloneness you feel today will bear the fruit of trust and thankfulness tomorrow.

Works Cited:
* All scriptures used unless otherwise noted are taken from the NIV translation.

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Gretchen is a regular Refresh Life blogger who writes for Refresh Life from the Peruvian capital of Lima. Her fresh writing style and ability to make the Bible come alive is what makes her one of Refresh Life's favorite writers and speakers! -Editor
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