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Grief, Trauma, and Chronic Illness

Christian Grief and Depression

A gentle Christian guide for the overlap between grief and depression.

Last updated: May 2026

Quick Answer

Grief and depression can overlap. Faith does not require you to rush grief or pretend loss does not hurt.

What this page covers:

  • How grief and depression overlap
  • When to seek help
  • Faith and lament
  • Tiny next steps

Start here

Grief and depression can overlap. Faith does not require you to rush grief or pretend loss does not hurt.

Still Here Faith offers Christian encouragement and resource navigation, not therapy, diagnosis, medical advice, treatment, or crisis care.

A gentle Christian perspective

Faith does not require pretending you are fine. It can be wise to receive care through trusted people, pastoral support, medical professionals, therapy, medication when appropriate, prayer, Scripture, rest, and practical support.

What to do next

  • Choose one tiny next step instead of trying to fix everything today.
  • Use a related Still Here resource from the vault.
  • If symptoms are heavy or safety feels uncertain, involve a qualified professional or crisis support.

One tiny next step

Pick one small next step: read one related article, download one resource, or tell one safe person what is happening.

Trusted next steps

Helpful sources and starting points

External links are starting points, not endorsements. If you are in immediate danger, call emergency services or call/text 988 in the U.S.

🤝 Find Support

Find one gentle next step

Browse the Still Here Faith vault for prayers, support guides, and low-capacity resources.

Common Questions

Is this page a replacement for professional care?

No. This page is encouragement and resource navigation. It is not therapy, medical advice, diagnosis, treatment, or crisis care.

Can Christians seek professional help?

Yes. Therapy, medication when appropriate, medical care, pastoral care, and trusted support can all be part of faithful care.

What if I feel ashamed?

Shame is common, but needing help does not mean weak faith or spiritual failure.