Wednesday, November 11
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THE SUFFERING OBJECTION
Storms are a part of life. You needn't live long to discover that life's storms can take many forms. Physical pain is a storm. So is
mental or emotional distress. And storms hit the houses of good people.
In the movie Shadowlands, Anthony Hopkins
portrayed British author C. S. Lewis, whose wife died soon after their mid-life marriage. In one scene from the film, a minister
tries to give Lewis a "God-knows-best" kind of pat answer, and Lewis explodes. "No!" he shouts. "This is a mess, that's all
anyone can say. It's just a mess." Christians believe in a loving, personal God who cares about His creation, and the Bible
teaches that God is all-powerful and able to do anything. Given those two suppositions, it's no surprise that non-believers balk
when Christians suffer. It doesn't add up.
Rabbi Harold Kushner concluded in his book When Bad Things Happen to
Good People that God cares about our suffering, but is powerless to do anything about it. Eli Wiesel said of the God Kushner
described, "If that's who God is, why doesn't He resign and let someone more competent take His place?" The answer to this
dilemma lies in a thing called free will. God could intervene 100% of the time and rescue us from the fallen-ness of the world
and the consequences of our own choices, but to do so would rob us of the free will to love Him. The deeper truth is that He is
present in the suffering, and in His sovereignty He is able to make all of it work together for good to those who love Him. No
sorrow leaves us where it found us. It drives us from God, or draws us near to Him...but that choice is ours.
Memory Verse
MATTHEW 7:27
And the rain descended, and the floods came, and the winds blew, and burst against that house; and it fell...
Read Through The Bible
1 Timothy 6; Psalm 139-140