Friend, when someone asks me how to cope with anger or confusion toward God after a personal tragedy, I can’t and won’t answer that question as an outsider. I answer it as someone who has had to wrestle with it in my own life. There are days when the old pain still rises up in me, and the habits that formed in the shadow of abuse still try to pull me back into a way of living I don’t want. In those moments, my mind can get loud and accusatory, and I can feel that ugly thought creep in: “What’s the point? If God allowed all of that, why should I keep fighting now?” I’m not proud of that thought, but I’m not going to pretend it never comes. What I’ve had to learn is that the presence of that thought does not mean I’m faithless; it means I’m human, wounded, and still in need of God’s mercy.
One of the most helpful things Scripture taught me is that God does not require me to fake peace in order to be allowed into His presence. The Bible is filled with faithful people who brought their confusion and pain straight to God without polishing it first. David cried, “How long, O Lord?” because his sorrow felt daily and unrelenting, yet he still spoke to God as “my God,” and he still moved toward trust in God’s mercy (Psalm 13). Another psalm opens with words so raw they almost scare people: “My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me?” Yet that cry is still a prayer, not a departure (Psalm 22:1–2). When my soul is tempted to shut down, those prayers remind me that lament is not rebellion; lament is what it looks like when I refuse to let go of God even while I don’t understand Him.
Job helps me too, because Job did not lose a little; he lost almost everything, and his words were not gentle. He cursed the day of his birth and spoke from a place of deep anguish (Job 3). He said plainly that his complaint was bitter and that he wanted to reason with God (Job 23; Job 13:3–15). Yet, for all his confusion, Job kept bringing his words to God rather than walking away from God. That matters. If I’m going to cope in a way that doesn’t poison my faith, I have to do the same thing: I have to bring my anger into God’s presence instead of turning it into distance, isolation, and private bitterness.
I also have to be honest about the difference between anger and accusation. Anger says, “Lord, this hurts, and I don’t understand.” Accusation says, “Lord, You are not good.” I’ve learned I can say the first without crossing into the second. Sometimes my confusion is heavier than my anger. I look at what happened to me, and I can’t make it fit neatly into a simple explanation. And then I have to remember what the Lord Himself tells us: His thoughts are not my thoughts, and His ways are higher than mine (Isaiah 55:8–9). There are “secret things” that belong to the Lord, and I do not have access to everything He knows (Deuteronomy 29:29). That doesn’t answer every question, but it does keep me from demanding a kind of control that only God can have.
The book of Lamentations describes what it feels like when suffering makes God seem distant, even when you’re still talking to Him. The writer says he has seen affliction, walked in darkness, and felt hemmed in; he even says, “You have moved my soul far from peace” (Lamentations 3:1–33). That is the language of tragedy. But then something happens: he recalls God's mercies and compassion, and he anchors his hope in God’s faithfulness, “They are new every morning; Great is Your faithfulness” (Lamentations 3:1–33). That shift doesn’t deny the darkness; it keeps darkness from becoming the final word. When my mind is spiraling, I often have to do the same thing: I recall what I know to be true about God when I can’t make sense of what happened to me.
Psalm 73 has also helped me, because it captures another layer of anger, the anger of unfairness. The psalmist admits he almost stumbled when he watched the wicked prosper while he felt plagued and chastened (Psalm 73). He says it was “too painful” to understand until he entered the sanctuary of God, and his perspective changed (Psalm 73). That line hits me every time. It reminds me that when I’m alone with my thoughts, my pain can become my entire universe. But when I bring my pain into God’s presence, through worship, prayer, and Scripture, my vision starts to widen. Not because everything becomes easy, but because I remember that God is still God even when life is not fair.
Now I want to speak gently to the part of your question that feels dangerous, because I recognize it in myself too. When someone has lived through tragedy, there can be a temptation to excuse sin as inevitability: “This is who I am, this is what happened to me, so I might as well give in.” I understand the logic, but I also know it is not the truth. It is the voice of exhaustion talking, not the voice of God. The Lord never tells us to surrender to our worst impulses. He tells us to bring our burdens to Him, because He cares (1 Peter 5:7; Psalm 55:22). He tells us to trust Him with our whole heart, even when our understanding is incomplete, because He can direct our paths even through what we cannot explain (Proverbs 3:5–6). He tells us that if we lack wisdom for the next step, we can ask, and He will give it without reproach (James 1:2–5). That matters because tragedy can make me feel condemned for struggling, but Scripture tells me God is not standing over me with contempt; He is near to the brokenhearted (Psalm 34:18).
So how do I cope, practically, without denying what I feel? I pour out my heart before Him. I name what I’m feeling, what I’m afraid of, what I don’t understand, and what I’m tempted to believe. “Trust in Him at all times… pour out your heart before Him; God is a refuge for us” (Psalm 62:8). That is not poetic language to me; that is survival language. I also pay attention to time, because anger can become sin when I let it settle in my soul and harden into resentment. Scripture warns me not to be quick-tempered, and it tells me not to let the sun go down on my wrath or give place to the devil (Ecclesiastes 7:9; Ephesians 4:26–27). I’ve learned that unresolved anger becomes spiritual rot if I nurse it. I want my anger to become prayer, not poison.
At the same time, I don’t pretend the answer is “just trust God,” as if it’s a flip of a switch. The Bible acknowledges that grief can be long, and that it may take time for the heart to catch up to what the mind knows. Even Psalm 42 shows a believer talking to his own soul, asking why it is cast down, and then calling himself back to hope in God (Psalm 42). Psalm 77 shows a man so overwhelmed that he questions whether God has forgotten to be gracious, and then he chooses to remember God’s works and wonders (Psalm 77). That is the rhythm: honest pain, then deliberate remembrance. Honest questions, then deliberate worship. Honest confusion, then deliberate trust.
I also hold onto a hard but necessary truth: free will and God’s sovereignty operate simultaneously. People really do sin, and what they do is really evil. God is not the author of abuse, and God does not delight in wickedness. Yet God is still sovereign, and He can redeem what He does not approve. That’s why Romans 8:28 is not a cliché to me; it’s a lifeline. God works all things together for good to those who love Him and are called according to His purpose (Romans 8:28). That does not mean the tragedy was good. It means the tragedy is not untouchable by God. It means my story is not finished. It means God can take what someone meant for evil and use it in ways that ultimately serve His purposes, even if I can’t see the whole pattern right now.
And friend, I want to end where Scripture ends so often: not with an explanation, but with God Himself. If your heart is broken, God is near (Psalm 34:18). If your burdens are crushing, you can cast them on Him because He cares (1 Peter 5:7). If your mind is racing, you can bring your requests to Him, and His peace can guard your heart and mind (Philippians 4:6–7). That is what coping looks like in the Bible: not pretending tragedy didn’t happen, and not pretending anger isn’t real, but choosing to keep talking to God in the middle of it until the anger becomes prayer, the confusion becomes humility, and the pain becomes a place where God meets us.