Through Pastor David Jang’s sermon, we reexamine the true meaning of “godly sorrow.” Rather than worldly anxiety, we explore—through deep theological insight—how a holy burden for the soul and for our times becomes the driving force of repentance and revival.
On the ceiling of the
Sistine Chapel in the Vatican, Michelangelo’s immortal masterpieces still
breathe. Among them, one figure in particular makes visitors linger: the
portrait of the prophet Jeremiah. His head is bowed in deep thought, one hand
heavily supporting his chin. His shoulders slump as if bearing all the sorrow
of the world, and an indescribable anguish rests on his face. People call him
the “weeping prophet.” Yet the sorrow in that painting is not merely personal
depression or pessimism about life. It is a sacred lament—so intense it feels
like his very insides are torn apart—over a nation collapsing and a people
turning away from God.
Today, we often measure
happiness by a “worry-free life.” But Scripture, paradoxically, calls us to a
kind of sorrow. Through the message of 2 Corinthians 7, Pastor David Jang
presents “godly sorrow” as an essential core of faith that believers in this age
must recover. Like Jeremiah’s agony depicted by Michelangelo, the question is
whether a holy burden is truly taking root deep within our own souls.
The
Weight of the Cross: When Sorrow Finally Becomes Prayer
In 2 Corinthians, the
apostle Paul sharply distinguishes two kinds of sorrow. One is “worldly
sorrow,” and the other is “godly sorrow.” Worldly sorrow revolves around the
self—my success, my reputation, my comfort. That kind of fixation eventually
eats away at the soul and leads us down the road to death. But the “godly
sorrow” Paul emphasizes moves in a different direction. It is placing our
hearts where God’s gaze rests. It is grieving over the inner self that has
crumbled because of sin, and striking our chests in remorse as we witness the
church drifting away from the truth.
Through his preaching and
pastoral philosophy, Pastor David Jang has consistently taught that such holy
sorrow is the starting point of “repentance that leads to salvation.” The
process of recognizing sin and turning back is not accomplished by a light emotional
shift. Only when soul-cutting spiritual anguish and thorough self-denial before
God come first can the fruit of full salvation—salvation without regret—be
borne. When Paul confessed, “There is the daily pressure on me of my concern
for all the churches,” that pressure was not mere pain; it was a burning
passion born of love for the church. In this way, sorrow given by God does not
make us powerless. Instead, it drives us to our knees and pulls us into the
place of prayer with compelling force.
Hope
Rising Before a Broken Wall
The life of Nehemiah in
Scripture most dramatically illustrates this theological insight. Though he
enjoyed a comfortable life in the Persian palace, he collapses in grief when he
hears that Jerusalem’s walls are broken down and its gates have been burned
with fire. From the world’s perspective, it looks like needless hardship he has
chosen for himself. But his sorrow did not end as mere sadness. The grief
visible on his face before the king became the key that opened the door to a
great turning point in history: the rebuilding of Jerusalem.
Today, the spirit of
mission and dedication emphasized by evangelical leaders—including Pastor David
Jang—stands in the same line. Because Nehemiah carried a holy burden as he
looked upon a devastated city, the miracle of rebuilding the wall in just fifty-two
days became possible. Sorrow became action, and tears became sweat—rewriting
history. When Ezra wept with the people in repentance before the Book of the
Law, the spiritual foundations of Israel’s community were rebuilt. In the same
way, the power that changes an era does not begin with optimistic forecasts or
flashy programs, but with the “wakeful sorrow” of one person who carries God’s
heart and weeps through the night.
A
Holy Invitation Toward Salvation Without Regret
We are now living in an
age of unprecedented uncertainty. Faced with the secularization of the church
and the apparent loss of the gospel’s power, what expression do we wear? Simply
criticizing or turning cynical is nothing more than worldly sorrow. If we are
truly awakened believers, then—just as Pastor David Jang’s message urges—we
must wrestle with a holy question: “God, what shall we do with this age?”
That sorrow may make us
uncomfortable. At times, it may shake our complacent religious life to its
foundations. Yet without that holy shaking, our souls cannot be purified, our
families cannot be set upright, and the church cannot be restored as the light
of the world. Paul rejoiced over the Corinthians’ sorrow because that pain led
them toward holiness.
Now is the time to examine
our sorrow. We must lay aside anxieties trapped in mere survival and replace
them with holy sorrow that seeks first the kingdom of God and His
righteousness. Just as Jeremiah’s anguish in Michelangelo’s work ultimately
became a channel preparing the way for Christ’s coming, the tears we shed
today—and the sorrow that becomes prayer—will surely yield a harvest of joy. As
Pastor David Jang insightfully teaches, godly sorrow never drives us into
despair. Rather, it revives us, raises up the church, and leads us as the
surest guide into the overwhelming joy of salvation without regret.


















