FORGET NONE OF HIS BENEFITS, volume 7, number 33, August 14, 2008
I have heard Thee by the hearing of the ear, but now my eye sees Thee;
Therefore I retract, I repent in dust and ashes, Job 42:5, 6.
Where Is God In Suffering?
On July 23,
2007 Dr. William Pettit of nearby Cheshire, CT
experienced a man’s worst nightmare. On that evening two convicted felons,
released two days earlier on parole, invaded the Pettits' home, torturing Dr.
Pettit, his wife, and two teen-age daughters, raping his wife, and daughters,
murdering them, and then setting the house on fire. Dr. Pettit miraculously
survived the ordeal and has shown remarkable grace in the face of untold
suffering. My suspicions about Dr. Pettit were recently confirmed. He is a
Christian and no doubt God is the One who has sustained him. But here’s my
question- where was God in all of this? Who, or what is behind the evil and
suffering in our world? This is far from a mere academic question, for each of
us experience injustice and suffering in some way; and we certainly see it all
around us. Where is God in suffering?
Job, who lost his children, wealth, and health was asking the why
question when he finally came to peace, after God asked him a series of
devastating, rhetorical questions which revealed to him God’s sovereignty,
wisdom, and goodness. Job, after seeing the glory and majesty of God humbled himself under His mighty
hand. Job’s friends, however, were no help at all. When first coming to Job
they did a good deed. They remained silent before Job for seven days, simply
being with him in his suffering. From there, however, it was all downhill.
Eliphaz strongly suggested Job’s problems were due to his own sin, that God was
paying him back for evil he had done earlier, Job 4:7ff. Bildad suggested the
suffering was due to Job’s children living in ungodliness, Job 8:2ff. And
Zophar believed it is due to Job’s unwillingness to repent, Job 11:13ff. Only
Elihu approached the issue properly, stressing the utter sovereignty, power,
wisdom, and goodness of God, Job 37:1ff. But God Himself shows Job His mighty
power, Job 38-41, reducing him to humility and awe.
From where does suffering come? We can say God permits the devil to work over
God’s people. We see this clearly stated in Job’s life, Job 1:12, Job 2:6. We
even see this in the life of the Lord Jesus where the Holy Spirit sends
Jesus into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil, Matthew 4:1ff. We see
this again in Peter when Jesus says to him, “Simon, Simon, Satan has demanded
permission to sift you like wheat, but I have prayed for you,” Luke 22:31. And Paul had his thorn in the
flesh, what he calls a messenger from Satan, II Corinthians 12:7.
We can also say God permits wicked people to bring harm to His people. The
prophet Habakkuk is perplexed at the impending invasion by the Babylonian
Empire under Nebuchadnezzar, wondering how God can allow such
a wicked and impetuous people to harm His covenant people. God clearly says
that He has raised them up for that very purpose, Habakkuk 1:6. Thus we can say
that God permitted these two felons to bring murder and suffering to the Pettit
family. And we can also say God permits the consequences of Adam’s fall into
sin to bring hardship on us. Death, disease, disasters, and war are the result
of the fall into sin. God could stop these but so often He does not.
If we stop here, however, we are not going far enough and we really are not
able to get to the heart of the matter. God not only permits suffering. He also
ordains it. He brings it. To say He merely permits it is like saying a
policeman at Mather and Main Street in Hartford permits a drug deal to go down
because he only has a pistol and the bad guys have AK-47’s. God is not
outgunned by the devil, people, or fate.
In Isaiah 45:6, 7 God says that He alone is God, the One forming light and
creating darkness, causing well being and creating calamity. In Amos 3:6 the
prophet says, “When a trumpet is blown in the city, will not the people
tremble? If a calamity occurs in a city has not the Lord done it?” God not only
permits or allows evil but He also ordains it. I am not saying man is not
responsible for his actions. Those who brought such suffering on the Pettit
family deserve to die for what they did. They willfully chose to do it. God did
not make them do it. We have here a mystery, an antinomy or apparent
contradiction. God’s ways are higher than our ways. His thoughts are higher
than our thoughts. Though God raised up the Chaldeans to bring judgment on Judah, He also held them responsible for their actions, promising judgment on them for
their horrid treatment of His people. See Jeremiah 50, 51. And Peter told his
audience at Pentecost that Jesus was delivered up by the
predetermined plan and foreknowledge of God, having been nailed to the cross by
the hands of godless men, Acts 2:23. Both are true. God ordains suffering and
man is totally responsible for what he does.
Why is this important? If God merely permits evil, if people or the devil work
free of God’s providence, if fate or chance are real then we are in terrible
trouble. This would mean we are completely at the mercy of the devil and evil
men, and that is no comfort at all. If things happen by chance then there is no
reason for the suffering whatsoever. Many believe this way, and are terribly
depressed and despondent.
But if God ordains whatsoever comes to pass, if God ordains all things, even
the day of evil, then there is a purpose. Our depression and despondency from
suffering comes because we begin in the wrong place. We begin with our
circumstances, with our grasp of the situation, and this will always prove
deadly. We must resist that temptation and begin with God. And what do we need
to remember about God? He is all good, the only One who can and will bring good
from everything for those who love Him, Romans 8:28. He is completely
sovereign, all powerful in every circumstance. He is in heaven and does as He
pleases, Psalm 115:3. He brings calamity. As R. C. Sproul has so
ably said, “There is no such thing as a maverick molecule in the universe.”
Paul makes this clear in Romans 8:29, 30. And He is all wise, Romans 11:33ff.
He knows exactly what He is doing, accomplishing His purpose for His glory and
our good. But still, why does God permit, bring, ordain suffering? He does so
for three reasons. First, He gets glory by using such to draw His people to
Himself in eternal salvation, Ephesians 1:4-6. He uses suffering to sanctify
His people, building holiness in us through it, I Peter 1:5, 6. And He uses
suffering in our glorification. It causes us to live for Christ, to long for
heaven, to desire the presence of Christ more than anything in this world,
Revelation 21:1-4. Nothing else makes sense. Nothing else satisfies. Is this a
hard doctrine to grasp? Yes, but in the end it is the only thing which brings
comfort.
FORGET NONE OF HIS BENEFITS is a weekly devotional by Reverend Al Baker,
pastor of Christ Community
Presbyterian Church in West Hartford, Connecticut.
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