Your
Brother Daniel
For
more great blogs as this one go to Daniel’s blog site at: www.Mannsword.blogspot.com
Is God our Enemy?
In
view of the suffering that our Lord allows, one “Christian” blogger charged:
·
The
great judgment of Matthew 25 should apply to God too. I was hungry and you gave me nothing to
eat. I was trying to take a flight and
you didn’t stop a missile from hitting my plane. I was trying to solve the HIV/AIDS crisis and
you let a missile obliterated my body. I
was on death row and you let them kill me.
I was simply playing soccer with my cousins and you let the bomb kill
all of us. I was cooking for my family
and you let tanks into my neighborhood.
I was going for a hike and you let me be kidnapped and tortured to death. I was walking down the street and you let
people burn me alive. I was raped at my
school and you did nothing to hold back my attackers. I shot myself and you didn’t come to help
me. I died of cancer and you didn’t
bring me a cure. I starved to death and
you gave me nothing to eat. The
tragedies that have taken place today are too numerous to list. What you have done to the least of these you
have done to all of us. What do you have
to say for yourself? Silence…just like
always. In the absence of any defense, my judgment today is that God is our
passive enemy.
Admittedly,
we have all felt like this. However, this charge not only reflects a failure to
understand God but also a failure to understand ourselves. What is it that we
fail to see about ourselves? That as certain plants require frost, we too
require suffering in order to bear spiritual fruit. We have a mistaken
conception of what should constitute the ideal life – a relatively pain-free
life of only the simplest, doer struggles – and when our lives fail to conform
to our ideal and expectations, we indict God.
Frankly,
I still require regular doses of suffering. Without them, I tend to grow proud
and arrogant, and when I do, my God has a way of growing smaller. The Apostle
Paul detailed his painful, teachable moment this way:
·
We
do not want you to be uninformed, brothers and sisters,[a] about the troubles
we experienced in the province of Asia. We were under great pressure, far
beyond our ability to endure, so that we despaired of life itself. Indeed, we felt we had received the sentence
of death. But this happened that we might not rely on ourselves but on God, who
raises the dead. (2 Cor. 1:8-9)
If
trusting in God is of such surpassing worth, then anything – self-trust – that
interferes with this needs to be counteracted. And this is not a truth limited
to the Christian revelation. Instead, we find that, in the absence of
suffering, we become self-satisfied, self-righteous, and self—sufficient. We
then tend to think more of ourselves than we ought and less of others. We
relegate them to a position beneath us and deem them unworthy of our
compassion.
Also,
without suffering and loss, we become ungrateful and take for granted our lives
and relationships. We all have seen the joy when a loved one is rediscovered
after an earthquake. Perhaps then, we need such tragedies.
Without
suffering, we do not grow. One study revealed that those who reported that they
were most satisfied with their lives grew the least. This truth is also
reflected in biblical revelation:
1. Consider it pure joy,
my brothers and sisters,[a] whenever you face trials of many kinds, because you
know that the testing of your faith produces perseverance. Let perseverance
finish its work so that you may be mature and complete, not lacking anything.
(James 1:2-4)
2. We also glory in our
sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance,
character; and character, hope. (Romans 5:3-4)
We
fail to understand the need for suffering. One bystander saw a butterfly struggling
mightily to emerge from its cocoon, helped it free itself from its cocoon, but
the butterfly died as a result. He didn’t understand that the struggle to free
itself from the cocoon was a struggle necessary for its development. We too
fail to see the necessity for struggling and pain and therefore rush to condemn
God.
Is
God our enemy, as the blogger claims? Perhaps, instead, we think more of our
myopic indictments than we ought. In contrast, those who regard Him as a
friend, experience Him as a friend, and benefit from this friendship.
Consequently, we experience increasingly better mental and physical health, as
the surveys reveal. The benefits even extend to our most intimate
relationships, as former atheist, Patrick Glynn, reports:
·
A
1978 study found that church attendance predicted marital satisfaction better
than any other single variable. Couples in long-lasting marriages who were
surveyed in another study listed religion as one of the most important
“prescriptions” of a happy marriage. (God:
The Evidence, 64)
Perhaps
then God does have His reasons for allowing suffering, and those who are
willing to listen to them benefit as a result.
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