Rick Warren returns to pulpit after son’s April suicide

Rick Warren spoke about the death of his son Matthew when he returned to the pulpit July 27.

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LAKE FOREST, Calif. (BP)—Rick Warren, pastor of Saddleback Church in Lake Forest, Calif., returned to the pulpit July 27 for the first time since his son’s suicide.

Warren, author of the bestseller The Purpose Driven Life, had taken a 16-week absence after Matthew Warren, 27, took his life in April following a long struggle with mental illness.

matthew warren130Matthew WarrenHis death brought an outpouring of support for the Warren family, including from Frank Page, president of the Southern Baptist Convention’s Executive Committee and a former SBC president, who lost his 32-year-old daughter Melissa to suicide in 2009.

‘Heart is broken’

“My heart is broken as I’ve heard the news about Rick Warren’s son,” Page said via Twitter the day after Matthew Warren’s death. “Please pray. Unfortunately, I understand that which they experience now.”

Warren took the pulpit at the Saturday evening service to a standing ovation, thanking Saddleback staff, members, his family and local pastors who supported him.

“In the middle of all that intense pain, Kay and I … and our entire family, we’ve all felt the favor of God on our lives because of your prayers,” he said.

Warren, with comments from his wife, Kay, preached the first message in a new sermon series titled, “How to Get Through What You’re Going Through.”

When asked how he and his family are getting through this time, Warren said, the answer rests on three truths that never change.


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God ‘grieves with us’

The first one is life doesn’t make sense, but people can have peace because they know God is with them and loves them, he said. God grieves with us, and he wants to take pain and turn it around as a means to help others who are suffering in the same way.

“He wants to use it as your life message and your life mission,” Warren said.

He acknowledged he still does not understand why his son’s mental illness never was healed or why he died, but having an explanation is not the point.

“I would rather walk with God with all my questions unanswered than to have all my questions answered and not have him in my life,” he said.

The second truth is everything on earth is broken, but people still can have joy because God is good and has a greater plan, he said. Nothing works perfectly in this world, and sin is wearing people down. But they still can rely on God.

God’s plan is good

“His plan is bigger than the problem you’re going through, and it’s a good plan,” he said.

Kay Warren took the platform to explain how she could choose joy even when her hopes were crushed by Matthew’s death. The third truth, she said, is life is a battle, but people can have hope because there’s more to the story.

During her son’s mental illness, she built up hope that God would heal him, she recalled, and she believed he would. After Matthew’s suicide, all the things she had used to give her hope seemed to mock her, and she had to figure out what to do when the outcome was not as she expected.

“What I know about God prevents me from concluding that he is a fake or a phony or a tease, and what I know about myself prevents me from concluding that my faith wasn’t strong enough,” she said.

An enormous mystery remains, she said, but she is content to leave her questions unanswered until she sees Jesus, because she knows he never has forsaken her or her family.

‘Hope is alive’

“Hope may not look the way that I thought it would, but hope is alive in us because we know,” she said.

Warren returned to the stage, telling the congregation he comforts himself by knowing that even though Matthew’s life on earth was full of suffering, he is in his heavenly Father’s arms.

Warren announced just as Saddleback fought to remove the stigma from having HIV/AIDS, the next fight will be to remove the stigma from mental illness.

“If you struggle with a broken brain, you should be no more ashamed than someone with a broken arm,” Warren said. “It’s not a sin to take meds. It’s not a sin to get help. You don’t need to be ashamed.”


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