8. If God Is Good, Why Is There So Much
Suffering In The World?
The
Bible teaches that God is all-powerful, able to do anything he
wants. The Bible also teaches that God is thoroughly good. Yet bad
things happen. If God is good and all powerful, He shouldn't let
bad things happen. Since they do happen, either God isn't good or
He isn't all-powerful.
The
Bible teaches that God made us to love us. Because of this, God
gave us the freedom to respond to that love, or to reject it. Love
is meaningless unless it is freely-given and freely-received. The
first use of free will, according to the Bible, was the first
humans, Adam and Eve. They made the purposeful choice to disobey
God and remove themselves from his leadership. Each of us, like
Adam and Eve, has used our free will in ways that has reflected
rebellion and disobedience against God.
All
choices come with consequences, else they were never really
choices. The decision to reject God's leadership altered God's
original design for how the world would operate and how life would
be lived, ushering in sin and evil as well as the consequences of
sin and evil. Theologians have termed this the "fall,"
and point out that we now live in a "fallen" world.
God
is not the author of sin and suffering - we are. God let us
choose, and we did. Even though it can be used in a way that
rejects His love and can have terrible consequences, God has
determined that the gift of free will is worth it. Could God step
in and stop the consequences of our choices? Yes, but He doesn't,
for to do so would violate our free will, and the violation of
free will would end the possibility of a true relationship between
us and God.
So
where is God in the suffering? Right in the middle of it. He is in
grief over how free will was used to reject Him. That's why he has
invested Himself in the process of healing the wounds that have
come from our choice by entering into the suffering process with
us in order to lift us out of it. Jesus on the cross was God
entering into the reality of human suffering, experiencing it just
like we do, in order to lift us out of it. Jesus on the cross was
God entering into the reality of human suffering, experiencing it
just like we do, in order to demonstrate that even when we used
our free will to reject him, his love never ended.
God could wipe out all evil and suffering this very night.
But if at
midnight
tonight God decreed that all evil would be stamped out in
the universe, not a single person would be here at
12:01
. God's hope is
that you will instead be given the time to search, and that your
search will result in an authentic relationship with Him. So the
real question is whether you, as a seeker, will allow the reality
of pain and suffering to drive you away from God, or to God.
[ 1 ] [
2 ]
[ 3 ] [ 4 ] [
5 ] [ 6 ] [ 7
] [ 8 ]
[ 9 ] [ 10 ]