How do we deal with suffering? How can
we understand the reasoning behind the hard times, or the necessity
of struggle? The question is so often asked; “Why do bad things
happen to good people?” As we journey through this life we often
find more trouble than peace and it so frequently leads people
astray. Is there any way to cope with it? The problem of pain is a
complex issue, one not solved with a single paper or a pithy phrase,
but we can spend some time today on a few hope-filled truths.
Probably the most harsh answer to the
issue of suffering, to the question of 'why do bad things happen to
good people is this: they don't. Bad things do not happen to good
people, bad things happen to bad people and we are all bad people.
This is yet another instance of how having your theology straight
affects your understanding of other things. The Bible clearly
teaches us that we as a race are fallen from birth and are enemies of
God by our very nature. As soon as we have the ability to choose we
choose sin, we desire after it, we want to rebel. So as I said the
harsh answer to the problem of pain is that we all deserve everything
we get. From the lost job to the flooded streets to the death of a
loved one to the death of ourselves; everything is the end result of
a fallen world brought about by our sin. No one is innocent,
everyone is guilty, we have no right to complain.
That being said there are more
comforting explanations for struggle. Growth for example. Going
back to my previous statement, having a systematic theology helps you
to understand the questions that arise in life. When we understand
the nature of God (as much as we can as finite, fallen creatures) and
the plan He has for us, we see that ultimately God is not worrying so
much about our 'happiness' as He is our 'holiness.'
“but
as He who called you is holy, you also be holy in all your conduct..”
(1
Peter 1:15)
“...just
as He chose us in Him before the foundation of the world, that we
should be holy and without blame before Him in love..”
(Ephesians
1:4)
It's
not that the Lord doesn't care about our happiness it's that He
understands the truth that we will not be happy until we are in Him!
True joy will come not from constant pleasure, not from an easy life,
not from myriad possessions but from a closeness to God! Even in the
most dire of situations, in the darkest of places, we can have joy!
Maybe not shouting from the rooftops and dancing in the streets joy,
but the joy of lasting peace and trust in the God who guides our step
and directs everything that happens. And we can trust Him, because
He knows what we don't. He knows that the man in the pew behind you
won't be made more holy by getting that new job, but that being
unemployed for a few more months will teach Him to rely on God for
his every need. That women praying at the steps of the stage won't
become more like Jesus in some particular way unless her son rebels
against God for another year; and her son won't learn to love God
above himself unless he see's just what sin he is capable of. We
wouldn't choose that path, we wouldn't choose these lessons but God
knows what we need and since He cares more for our holiness than our
'happiness' He will rain fire down on the life that wants rain!
“But
may the God of all grace, who called us to His eternal glory by
Christ Jesus, after you have suffered a while, perfect, establish,
strengthen, and settle you.”
(1
Peter 5:10)
“In
your struggle against sin you have not yet resisted to the point of
shedding blood. You have also forgotten the exhortation addressed to
you as sons: "My son, do not disdain the discipline of the Lord
or lose heart when reproved by him; for whom the Lord loves, he
disciplines; he scourges every son he acknowledges." Endure your
trials as "discipline"; God treats you as sons. For what
"son" is there whom his father does not discipline? If you
are without discipline, in which all have shared, you are not sons
but bastards. Besides this, we have had our earthly fathers to
discipline us, and we respected them. Should we not (then) submit all
the more to the Father of spirits and live? They disciplined us for a
short time as seemed right to them, but he does so for our benefit,
in order that we may share his holiness. At the time, all discipline
seems a cause not for joy but for pain, yet later it brings the
peaceful fruit of righteousness to those who are trained by it.”
(Hebrews
12:4-11)
Have
you ever compared the sorrows of this life to the suffering of Jesus
on the cross? Has anything you've gone through been like that? Has
it even been close to even the physical pain of His death? I doubt
that it has and I know that nothing you or I or anyone has ever gone
through is even comparable to the suffering He endured under the full
wrath of God against our sin! Our pain in this life is but a shadow
of death. A specter of the true punishment we deserve. God is using
these 'minor' pains to tell us something. If this is what earthly
pain looks like, if this what temporary physical suffering feels like
how horrible must an eternity in Hell be! If this is what it feels
like to endure the wrath of men, how must Jesus have felt under the
wrath of almighty God! God allows the shadow of death to cross over
us in part so we can appreciate the sacrifice of Jesus and so we can
run to Him for salvation. He allows it so that we would flee in
terror to Him.
Finally,
as Christians, we suffer because we are not of this world. There is
a promise in the New Testament that cannot be missed, Christ was
hated by the world and so we will be hated as well. If we seek to
live this life as God would have us live we will rub people the wrong
way. If we show them the holiness of God it will point out how
unholy they are, if we show them that their sins can be forgiven it
will force them to look at the sins they have hidden or denied. We
may not live a life of constant persecution but it will come from
someone in some form.
“Yes,
and all who desire to live godly in Christ Jesus will suffer
persecution.”
(2
Timothy 3:12)
I
know that this isn't every reason, but it's a start. Regardless of
the hows and the whys we as the people of God can find comfort in
Him. He is our rock and our cornerstone, our redeemer, brother, and
friend. He will hold us and keep us safe even in the midst of
trials. We may not understand, but that is when we have to trust Him
because He does know what is best. Pray for peace and comfort from
Him, pray for those you see in trouble around you and remember that
you may be the one that God would use to help them. When all the
world is falling apart, God will always stand sure; and when everyone
has left you, He'll be there.
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