The Nehor wrote:I think it's a good teaching. While there are times to mourn and know sadness these should be very temporary. We are commanded to be of good cheer.
I've taught this several times in my Sunday School class. "If you're living your religion and you're not happy figure out what you're doing wrong and fix it. God will be glad to help with this process." I do usually add that feeling guilt over it is pointless. Look at it rationally and fix it and go on your way rejoicing is the tone of my advice.
While it may be caused it may be caused by sin many times it is a piddling sin like not asking God to give you happiness. The kind of sin that is easily rectified and requires no more repentance then just going to God and asking.
There is a difference, though, between whining about your life, and not taking action, and true, clinical depression. The Church has, in the past few years, begun to take baby steps to recognize these differences and talk about this a bit more; I'm hoping that this trend continues.
People in our society, at large, need to look at clinical depression as a true medical ailment. If you have a broken limb, if you have cancer, etc., people understand, and are, for the most part, empathetic. A mental illness is still more taboo. True, clinical depression can't just be "fixed" by someone cheering you up, or by you just "snapping out of it".
In order to keep clinical depression under control, the patient needs therapy, and, in many cases, medication. It IS a physical ailment. The patient does NOT have control over simply having the ailment. Does he/she need to do everything he/she can to get well? Of course! But this process is no different than prodding someone to do physical therapy, etc.
There is no sin involved with this process. That is something that needs to be communicated to Church members, because I think that, as Beastie pointed out, this message gets lost.