Understanding Depression

Understanding depression it isn’t easy. To help, here is a look at the causes, types, and treatments, along with its effect on a persons faith.

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What did Charles Spurgeon, Abraham Lincoln, the prophet Elijah, Winston Churchill, and King David all have in common? They all suffered at various times from the dark cold of depression. Someone has called depression the “common cold of emotional illnesses.” It is a problem that affects approximately 18.8 million Americans - nearly 10 percent of the population - and is often misunderstood, misdiagnosed, and confused with lack of faith.

Believing Christians and those who minister to others are most certainly not immune to depression. Pastors, missionaries, and other ministry workers – and their spouses – live highly stressed lives, bearing many responsibilities, changes, and expectations. People come to you and share their heavy problems. Often the images of their horror stories stay alive in your own mind. It’s easy to believe that you must rescue them and fix their painful situations. This is very wearing. Some may experience what is called secondary traumatization, in which they pick up the depression of the people they are helping. You need to be aware of the signs of depression in yourself and in those to whom you minister.

Let’s take a look at the causes, types, and treatment of depression, with a special focus on its effect on a person’s spiritual walk.

WHAT IS DEPRESSION?

Depression can be a simple mood or a serious disorder. It can range from feeling a little down to feeling suicidal. It is an emotional state of pain, a thinking state of confusion, and a physical state of deregulation. The Bible describes it in Psalm 6 and 13 with such expressions as: “my bones are in agony, my soul is in anguish, I am worn out from groaning, I flood my bed with weeping, my eyes grow weak with sorrow. How long, O Lord? Will you forget me forever? How long will you hide your face from me? I wrestle with my thoughts and every day have sorrow in my heart. Give light to my eyes or I will sleep in death.” Depression is what Job experienced when he wished he had never been born.

WHO GETS DEPRESSED? 

Christians and non-Christians, children, teenagers, adults, and the elderly get depressed. One out of every four women and one out of every seven men become clinically depressed at some point in their lives. Today, depression is one of the leading health problems worldwide.

CAN DEPRESSION BE SERIOUS?

Depression can be fatal since it is the primary cause of suicide – 15 percent of depressed people will commit suicide. Depression is the reason for multitudes of medical visits and tests that bear no diagnostic results. People lose their jobs over depression. Marriages fail and people leave the ministry or mission field because of depression. Some severely depressed people are entirely unable to function and become prisoners of their own bedrooms. Depression can also be the underlying problem behind failing grades, affairs (when people look for something to make them feel better), alcoholism, withdrawal, and teenage rebellion. In the most serious situations, depression lies behind attempts at suicide, with middle-aged men being most likely to succeed in their attempts.

WHAT CAUSES DEPRESSION?

Depression is complex and has many causes. Some people are genetically predisposed to the chemical imbalances in the brain that bring on depression. Certain medications and physical illness have depression as a side-effect, for example, hypothyroidism, migraines, heart disease, diabetes, fibromyalgia, and others.

Depression is often the result of trauma, loss, or adjustment. Childhood trauma or neglect can trigger depression, at the time or later in life.

Depression can also be caused by:

WHAT ARE THE SYMPTOMS OF DIFFERENT KINDS OF DEPRESSION?

There are, generally speaking, four different kinds of depression.

1.  Depressed Mood. 

This is a short-lived emotional state of “feeling down” or “blue” and it is generally a feeling that comes and goes. You lose energy, mull over a loss or a problem, and find less enjoyment in life. As you process the loss or resolve the problem you come out of it. It may even pass when the weather improves.

This is a short-lived emotional state of “feeling down” or “blue” and it is generally a feeling that comes and goes. You lose energy, mull over a loss or a problem, and find less enjoyment in life. As you process the loss or resolve the problem you come out of it. It may even pass when the weather improves.

2.  Dysthymic Disorder. 

This is a “low grade” depressed mood state that is experienced on a regular basis for two years or longer (one year for children and adolescents).

The symptoms include:

3.  Major Depression. 

This is severe clinical depression, an illness. Your physiology, thinking, and emotional state are disturbed. It is disabling and interferes with your ability to function and think normally. It can be experienced at one time in your life or at repeated intervals. It can go on for months or for years, if untreated. The symptoms need to be constant for two weeks or longer to be diagnosed as major depression.

The symptoms include:

4.  Bipolar Disorder.  

A physiological disease that affects an individual with depression and alternating periods of hyper or manic behavior. Approximately three percent of the population has this disorder. People with this disorder can at times change and lose their sense of reality and potentially cause many problems in all their relationships, including the church. They might want to invest the church’s money in some far-out scheme, become paranoid, violent, or grandiose, claiming to be a prophet with visions or becoming outlandishly immoral. They need consistent long-term medical treatment by a psychiatrist.

DOES DEPRESSION AFFECT YOUR SPIRITUAL LIFE? 

Typically, depression does not affect your basic faith and beliefs; however, it is a time of deep anguish of the soul, so you don’t “feel” very spiritually renewed or revived. During depression you might feel like the worst of sinners, worthless to God and others. When you read your Bible the wrath of God may be exaggerated in your mind, and you may have difficulty grasping His grace. You might feel far from God or find it difficult to experience His love or joy, yet it may be a time more than any other in your life when you need to cry out to God, as David did in the Psalms, for God’s help and presence. It is a testing time of your faith because the “feelings” just are not there, and so you need to stand firm on what you know to be true. Elijah, Job, and King David help us understand that depression is not a sign of inferior discipleship.

HOW CAN DEPRESSION BE TREATED?

1.  Pray 

Pray for healing. Pray for the right helpers, both personally and professionally. Pray that God will give you strength to cope and insight into how you can help yourself.

2.  Reach Out to Others 

Ask others to pray for you. Share with those close and trusted friends what you are feeling and what you are going through. Not everyone will understand, so setting some boundaries during your healing time is appropriate. Depression makes it hard to for you to concentrate on praying or reading His Word. Have others pray with you, listen to CD’s, and listen to Christian music. When you are depressed you feel like avoiding meetings, but being in worship and fellowship does help. In serious depression, you may need to ask for extra help with your responsibilities and a leave of absence from work.

3.  Check Out the Cause

Look for the cause of your depression and, if possible, take the necessary steps to help yourself. For example, get a medical checkup, check the side effects of your medications, grieve a loss, exercise, problem solve, change a situation, or take a needed vacation.

4.  Seek Out Professional Help

If after you have done all you can and your depression is still present, you need to seek the counsel of a good Christian therapist or psychiatrist. 

You might need to work in therapy on:

5.  Medications

In severe or long-lasting depression, there is a biochemical imbalance in the brain and hormonal system. The body deregulates after too much internal or external stress. Antidepressant medications are then needed. Physical symptoms such as poor concentration, fatigue, crying, sleep, and appetite disturbances are indicators of a chemical imbalance. Antidepressants and/or other medications simply replace what is depleted in the body. They help you return to normal. They are not addictive; they are not “happy” pills; they do not change your feelings. In fact, if you are not chemically imbalanced, they will act like sugar pills and do nothing. Their function is similar to what insulin is to the diabetic. Today’s antidepressants are safe and have few side effects. Typically, it takes six to 12 months of medication to recover from a major clinical depression.

Depression is a very painful, but treatable condition. Don’t suffer alone. Help is available and you can lead a normal productive life.     

If you or someone you know is having thoughts of suicide, please contact the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline at 988 or 1-800-273-TALK (8255).

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