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Why
Does God Let It Happen?
Bill Jackson
It
has long been acknowledged that the problem of suffering is that
which atheists and infidels use as their "proof" that God does not
exist. Just a few weeks ago, one of our national newscasts had a
segment dealing with tragedies and catastrophic illness or accidents
as being the reason why some have given up their belief in God.
Some on that program, said that dealing with such unpleasantness
caused them to cease to believe in God. Their wonder was, "Why did
God let this happen?"
The
basis of this is highly selfish on man's part, for it says this:
"I only believe in God if He performs according to my expectations.
" In the Old Testament, Naaman was on the verge of rejecting
the healing God had for him because of his own expectations as to
how God would act (2 Kings 5:11,12). What kind of audacity is this
that puts man in the position of being the creature that replies
to the Creator, and refuses to believe unless the Creator performs
to the whim and fancy of man? Does the creature thus reply to the
Creator (Romans 9:20)?
There are
two or three considerations in this general area:
(1) Man
was made a creature of free will action. This
means that man has the freedom to do wrong,
if he chooses. It means, then, that he can be guided by evil motives
and even make a move against me or my family; he can bring great hurt
and sorrow to me, if he so desires. It is not that God is guiding
him; rather he is not letting God guide him and that's why his sinfulness
has touched me. The drunken driver runs over and kills a little child.
It happens because we have freedom of will.
(2) Men
can suffer because they violate the natural laws God has made.
They may do this intentionally, or they may do this accidental.
In either case, the hurt and sorrow can be brought upon men because
of it. A man working 150 feet in the air can make an error of judgment
and fall to his death. It was not that God caused it to be, but
through accidental circumstance, a natural law of God was breached
and sorrow is the result.
(3) Men
can suffer because they violate man-made laws, brought into being
within the will of God. We think now of
civil powers, ordained of God (Romans 13), and in violation of these
one might well suffer heavy penalty, even to be put to death. There
is hurt to him, and hurt to his family. Why did God let it happen?
Again, God did not cause it; man has freedom of will and can use
it to his own hurt, and hurt to those around him.
(4) Men
can suffer simply due to the imperfection in this world, brought
to such a state because of sin. The whole
of creation has been given life, and some of that, having good purpose
in some cases, can have an evil product when it touches a man. Hence,
the matter of disease, infection, illness. There are those circumstances
of an accidental nature that happen when natural laws react in an
unusual fashion. That is one price we pay in living in a sinful
world, and a world made so by man's misbehavior!
In sum,
an imperfect world is a reality.
God
uses it as a training ground, suiting man for eternity with Him.
Rather than giving up faith in seeing imperfection, we should be
thankful that some suffering is in the world. If it were not, then
Christ would not have suffered for us, and then where would we be?
Again,
we say, man proves his own basic selfishness when he overlooks the
world made so by his own sin, overlooks purposes that can be served
in man facing suffering in this life, overlooks the price to be
paid in having freedom of will, overlooks what is involved in living
by God's natural laws- and then declares, "I will not believe
in God unless He acts as I want Him to!"
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