John Evans, M.A. in Biblical Counseling
In recent years, conversations about men’s mental health have become increasingly common. The statistics about depression, anxiety, addiction, loneliness, suicide, and emotional anguish in men are staggering. But far too many Christian men are still reluctant to open up about their pain. Some are afraid they’ll look weak. Some think that getting help requires dipping into secular psychology or forfeiting biblical convictions. Some men have just become adept at quietly suffering. Christian men who wouldn’t dream of refusing to help someone else will often refuse help when they themselves are in need. We as Christians need to start having a different conversation, one that’s biblically faithful and genuinely compassionate.
The Myth of the Self-Sufficient Man
Many men have adopted the silent assumption that genuine strength means facing every hardship independently. Strength, responsibility and perseverance are virtues that we should all celebrate. What happens is that when taken too far, self-sufficiency turns into pride in disguise as strength. The Bible paints a much different portrait of manhood. God never intended for men to face the struggles of life all by themselves. In the garden, Adam was created for community; community with God and with others. Throughout Scripture, we see faithful men seeking counsel, confessing weakness, and depending upon God and His people.
We see the Apostle Paul openly sharing his vulnerabilities. In fact he got pretty honest about his troubles. Paul said that he was “so utterly burdened beyond our strength that we despaired of life itself”(2 Cor. 1:8). David didn’t hide his pain either. The Psalms are full of David throwing his laments towards God. Elijah fell into depression under a broom tree. None of these men were weak because they faced difficulties. In fact, their struggles became the conduit to greater reliance on God. Biblical manhood has nothing to do with the absence of weakness. True strength is the willingness to bring our weakness before God and to pursue obedience in spite of it.
Mental Health Is Not Merely a Modern Problem
Human beings have always struggled with fear, grief, despair, anxiety, shame, guilt, loneliness, and emotional exhaustion. While modern culture often uses the term mental health, Scripture has long addressed the realities that affect the inner person. The Bible describes people who were overwhelmed, discouraged, fearful, grieving, and emotionally exhausted. These experiences are not evidence of spiritual failure in themselves. They are part of living in a fallen world.
The Christian worldview provides a unique framework for understanding these struggles. We recognize that humanity is both body and soul. We are embodied persons, image-bearers whose thoughts, emotions, physical health, relationships, spiritual condition, and life circumstances all influence one another. Because we are embodied creatures, physical factors can contribute to emotional suffering. Likewise, spiritual struggles can affect our emotional and physical well-being. A biblical understanding of mental health avoids two extremes. It neither reduces every struggle to a spiritual failure nor treats people as nothing more than biological machines. Instead, Scripture presents a holistic view of the person, recognizing the complexity of living as embodied souls in a fallen world.
Why Christian Men Often Stay Silent
Many men suffer quietly because they believe they should simply “get over it.” Some fear judgment from others. Some assume that if they were stronger Christians, they would not struggle. Others believe that talking about emotional pain is inherently unmanly. Yet Scripture repeatedly calls believers to bear one another’s burdens (Gal. 6:2), encourage one another daily (Heb. 3:13), confess struggles appropriately (James 5:16), and build one another up (1 Thess. 5:11). The church should be one of the safest places for men to admit that they are struggling. Unfortunately, many men have learned that churches are places where they can discuss the recent football game, their latest golf score, maybe theology, but not weakness, not the burdens they bear in life as a husband, father, or just being a man. We must reject that false choice. Sound theology and a biblical church should produce deeper compassion, not less. Men need brothers in Christ who can listen without condemnation, speak truth without harshness, and faithfully walk alongside them.
Bearing One Another’s Burdens Requires Two Things. One of the clearest biblical commands regarding suffering is found in Galatians 6:2: “Bear one another’s burdens and so fulfill the law of Christ.” This command has profound implications for how Christian men approach mental and emotional struggles. Too often, conversations about men’s mental health focus exclusively on the individual who is struggling. Scripture, however, addresses both the burdened person and the community around him.
First, believers must be willing to bear with those who are suffering. The command to bear one another’s burdens requires Christians to cultivate a culture where struggling men are met with compassion rather than suspicion. If a brother is weighed down by grief, anxiety, depression, trauma, discouragement, or overwhelming life circumstances, our first response should not be criticism, clichés, or simplistic solutions. We are called to come alongside him, listen carefully, pray faithfully, encourage biblically, and help carry what feels too heavy for him to bear alone. Paul writes, “Rejoice with those who rejoice, weep with those who weep” (Rom. 12:15). Likewise, “Admonish the idle, encourage the fainthearted, help the weak, be patient with them all” (1 Thess. 5:14). Genuine biblical masculinity is demonstrated not only by courage and responsibility but also by compassion toward weaker brothers during difficult seasons.
Second, bearing burdens requires burdened men to be willing to share their burdens. This may be the more difficult challenge for many men. A burden cannot be shared if no one knows it exists. Many men have spent years believing that strength means silence. They suffer privately, conceal their struggles, and convince themselves that asking for help would burden others. Yet the command to bear one another’s burdens assumes that burdens are brought into the light. The Christian life was never intended to be lived in isolation. James 5:16 instructs believers to confess and pray for one another. Ecclesiastes 4:9–10 reminds us that two are better than one because when one falls, another can help him up. Even the apostle Paul regularly shared his afflictions and invited fellow believers to pray for him.
For many men, admitting, “I’m struggling,” may be one of the hardest acts of obedience they will ever undertake. Yet doing so is not weakness; it is humility. It is acknowledging that God often ministers His grace through His people. The church cannot bear burdens that remain hidden, and men cannot receive support they refuse to seek. Biblical community requires both compassionate believers willing to carry burdens and humble men willing to let others help carry them. When both occur, the church becomes what God intended it to be: a family where suffering is not faced alone and where Christ’s love is displayed through ordinary believers caring for one another.
Seeking Help Is Not Weakness
One of the greatest misconceptions in some Christian circles is that seeking counseling, pastoral care, or support somehow demonstrates a lack of faith. The opposite is often true. Seeking wise counsel is a biblical principle. “The way of a fool is right in his own eyes, but a wise man listens to advice” (Prov. 12:15). When a man seeks help, he acknowledges that he does not possess all the answers. He recognizes his need for wisdom, encouragement, accountability, and support. This posture reflects humility rather than weakness.
Biblical counseling can provide a place where men can honestly examine their struggles through the lens of Scripture. It helps them understand how God’s truth speaks to fear, anxiety, anger, depression, grief, addiction, marital conflict, trauma, and countless other challenges.
At the same time, because human beings are embodied souls, good biblical counseling also recognizes that physical factors can influence emotional and cognitive functioning. Sleep, chronic stress, medical conditions, neurological dysregulation, nutrition, medications, and other physiological realities should not be ignored. Addressing these factors is not a departure from Scripture but an application of a biblical anthropology that recognizes the inseparable relationship between body and soul. The goal is not merely symptom relief. The goal is to help men faithfully glorify God by caring for the whole person while growing in Christlikeness amid both suffering and sanctification.
The Gospel Offers More Than Coping
The modern mental health conversation often focuses on coping strategies, self-care, and symptom management. While practical tools have their place, Christians possess something infinitely greater. We possess hope. The gospel tells us that our deepest problem is not merely stress, anxiety, or discouragement. Our greatest problem is our alienation from God because of sin. Through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ, sinners can be reconciled to God. This does not mean Christians will never struggle emotionally. It does mean that our suffering is never meaningless. Our identity is not determined by our struggles. Our future is not defined by our present pain. The gospel offers forgiveness for guilt, comfort in suffering, purpose in hardship, and the sure hope of resurrection. No diagnosis, emotional struggle, or personal failure can separate believers from the love of God in Christ Jesus (Rom. 8:38–39).
A Challenge to Men
If you are struggling, do not isolate yourself. Talk to your pastor. Reach out to a trusted brother in Christ. Seek wise biblical counseling. Invite accountability. Pray honestly. Immerse yourself in God’s Word. Allow others to walk alongside you. Likewise, if you know a brother who is struggling, do not tell him simply to “be stronger.” Sit with him. Listen to him. Pray with him. Encourage him. Remind him of the promises of Christ. Help carry his burden. You do not have to pretend everything is fine.
The strongest men are not those who never struggle. The strongest men are those who face reality honestly, humble themselves before God, and allow the body of Christ to walk beside them. Biblical courage is not the denial of weakness. It is the willingness to bring weakness into the light and entrust yourself to the God whose power is made perfect in weakness (2 Cor. 12:9). The church needs men who are courageous enough to ask for help and churches courageous enough to help them well.
That is not weakness.
That is biblical manhood.