Junebug, I agree with you. I don't find much evidence that God cares too much about "feelings". What it does seem to me is that God cares about virtue. It is a bit strange to say it this way, but God doesn't much care if we are happy, or if our lives are pleasant or comfortable (really, this is our own lookout) but "wants" us to be joyful. If that makes any sense. The idea, for me, is that God wants people to be good at living and dealing with whatever comes at them - kind of like Michael Jordan on the basketball court or... pick your favorite virtuoso in whatever area - Picasso in painting, Clapton on guitar. When we touch that expertise - we get, not happiness which is more fleeting and just a 'feeling" but we experience something more expansive and persistent - Joy. (Reading medieval theologians taught me this.)
It also seems to me that people are given more than they can (or do) bear. Could they have coped? Seems unkind to say they could if they didn't. And, when we break, God loves us anyway. Which we may or may not have an experience of. It is better if we can be in touch with the divine love - "when I look into the abyss, the abyss looks back". But sometimes we can't, or won't. Hard to know the difference between can't and won't for me at the border.
Trust. Trust is tough. Much much harder for some people than others. Is it even warranted, except in some limited way? We shouldn't trust God to keep us fed, or warm or in good relationships. Maybe we trust that such is always possible if we put in the necessary work?... but I'm not really sure I'd even go that far - although its mostly true. Sometimes it is just flat out not. We are just "S*** out of luck." And maybe that doesn't matter to the cause of virtue - though it matters a lot to us. It does make it harder for me to love virtue.
It helps me to keep in mind the distinction between pain and suffering. Pain is inevitable and necessary. When I stub my toe, break my leg, or someone dies it hurts. It just hurts. Inevitably. There is no way to avoid pain and keep breathing and be above ground. Suffering, however, is avoidable. Suffering is caused by resisting pain and resisting what IS that can't be changed. Pain, when not resisted is finite - suffering draws it out, and can make it last forever. Denial causes suffering. Avoidance causes suffering. Repression causes suffering. I could go on. I am great at suffering. I get lots of opportunity to "practice" refraining from resistance...:eek: