Okay, friends - I traveled to Florida yesterday to arrive and find there was quite an interest in what I wrote in yesterday's blog about suffering. Here's a follow-up which will probably stir the pot more but at least will clarify my thinking :)
Theodicy is the word used to describe our attempts to explain the existence of evil given the fact that our God is a good God. "How can a loving God allow evil?" Since the ancient prophets raised the question, no satisfactory answers have been offered. So I suppose it may be idiocy on my part to even touch on the subject, not one time but twice!
First, let me say that I make certain assumptions when I write my blog. Foremost is the assumption that those who read it already know some things about me - things that I don't have to assure readers about before setting forth potentially controversial ideas. So in writing the blog yesterday, I assumed that you, the reader, know what I believe about the basic underlying goodness of God and I assumed that I don't have to put that into the record again before proceeding.
I enjoy wrestling with hard truths and ambiguous issues in Scripture. In the case of suffering, it isn't a question of whether or not our Father is good and loving. The question concerns how we sort out in our minds how He can either "allow" or "cause" what seems to us to be horrible things to happen.
I don't claim to have a definitive answer on this matter any more than the countless others who have addressed the matter throughout history. I do have an opinion though. If I'm wrong, that's okay. It's neither the first nor the last time. My attempt to address the topic here is nothing more than "thinking out loud" and here are my thoughts:
1. Our God is Sovereign over every detail of everything that happens in this world. Nothing happens outside of His control. If that isn't true, we're in big trouble, because if one thing can happen that He had no control over, what else might happen that could have catastrophic and even eternal consequences for us all? Either God is in complete charge or He is not. Again, if He is not, we're all screwed - plain and simple.
2. Under the umbrella of God's sovereignty is the reality that this whole world is under the power of "the wicked one." (See 1 John 5:19) God has allowed Satan and his minions to have run of the house for a time. However, this run of the house isn't without limitations. There are boundaries to what Satan can and cannot do. Those boundaries are set by Almighty God.
3. Does God "cause" or "allow" bad things to happen? First, we have to affirm that God doesn't tempt anybody to do evil. (See James 1:13) Left to himself, apart from the intervening grace of God, mankind will do evil as surely as water runs downhill. That has been true since the Garden of Eden. Then the question comes, "Does God allow evil?" and the answer is, "Of course, He does!" How else would it happen?
4. Could God prevent the evil things that happen from happening? Certainly. Does He always prevent them? No, He does not. Why doesn't He prevent them? Because the things that we see as horrible and evil fit into a greater plan than the vision of short-sighted humanity can see. In other words, God allows evil events to happen because in some way the dark threads of man's sinful behavior fits into the greater plan that God has.
A perfect example is the crucifixion of Jesus. Had we have been there that day, nobody could have ever convinced us that God had anything to do with this, but He did. Did God tempt Judas to betray Jesus? Of course not. Did God tempt the soldiers to crucify Him? No. However, by virtue of the fact that He allowed it, He is complicit in the whole event. After, all Jesus is the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world. What happened that day had to happen.
As the sign on President Truman's desk used to read, "The buck stops here." If somebody allows something that they could have stopped, it really makes no sense to argue whether they "allowed it" or "caused it." The answer becomes a moot point. Again, if God can stop something and doesn't stop it, we must acknowledge that there was a reason for His choice. If somebody tried to hurt Melanie, I would fly into that person in a rage to stop it from happening. However, when medical doctors hurt my children during physical treatments they needed as children, I stood by and watched it happen because I understood the greater cause present that my children couldn't see at the time.
5. That point brings me to the issue of our trying to defend God's reputation. We can't make sense out of why some things happen. The events violate our sense of justice so we sometimes say, "God had nothing to do with that!" (Billy Graham said that shortly after 9/11 and, though I love the man, I cringed when I heard it.) Something in the world got out of hand - God's hand - for a moment??? What a terrifying thought! If that were true, how could we know when He will have control over everything and when He won't??? No, our loving God is in full control at every moment - even in the darkest and worst times of life. He walks through those moments with us, holding us in His loving arms and saying to us, "You can't understand, but you can trust."
Some play the free-will card when they try to explain the apparent horrors of life. "God gave man free will and he can do what he wants," they argue. I know my next statement will probably set off an alarm with many people but here it is: I don't believe in free will. Free will? What does that mean? I'll try to be careful how I say this so as to not be misunderstood: We do make choices in life, so please don't give me the worn-out "robot argument." However, those choices don't don't emerge from a will that is free. Every person's will has been shaped, influenced, and directed by the stimuli that has come into their lives. There is a reason people make the choices they do. Choices aren't made in a vacuum. They are made in conjunction with influences that move our wills in one direction or another. Again, there is a reason why people make the choices they do. Could God have protected a person from the influences that led him to make a wrong choice? Of course. Then why didn't He? That is the question of the ancients as well as contemporaries and, to our dismay, has no satisfactory answer. When we reach a dead end on the street of reason, we have to take a sharp turn onto the road of trust. It's that simple.
Why does God allow rape, incest, murder, torture, etc? I don't know! But if He could stop it (and He could!) and He doesn't, we must assume it serves a greater purpose than our finite minds can comprehend. Don't think for a moment that I come to this conclusion with callous disregard for those who hurt. My own wife was repeatedly molested as a child by her grandfather - a man I long wanted to kill and hoped would one day go to hell - a man whose grave I imagined writing "child molester" on with Round Up (a weed killer that would kill the grass wherever it touched.) Yes, I have known anger about injustices and evil in this world. (As an aside, both Melanie and I forgave him and have recorded a teaching that gives the details. It's called, "Freedom Through Forgiveness.)
The bottom line is that if God doesn't stop something that He could stop, the existence of that event must serve an eternal purpose. We don't have to understand it, but to come to peace with the event, with ourselves and even with God, we must trust.
The older I get and the deeper I go with biblical truth and with my pursuit of theology, the more I realize there are many paradoxes (two facts that are equally true but appear to be in contradiction) with our God and His ways. We must learn to be content with those paradoxes and not insist on finding definitive answers to every question. God doesn't need us to defend Him nor explain Him. He just wants us to trust Him. He is good. That's a given. How terrible events can be reconciled with that fact is a question that most likely will linger as long as the world stands.
Fantastic post Steve!!
ReplyDeleteThis is really encouraging for me, particularly as last year my dad died - and despite many prayers for him and from others i did not see him become a christian....For quite a time this tore me up - even put me in a mental hospital for 9 days, but gradually i am starting to be led by God to trust in Him - not in my trust even. I felt responsible for my dad and mum's salvation (as well as living with them til their deaths in a terribly enmeshed way) but God knew that if i got my way i would have become sure that it was because of my prayers...I found a book recently that helped me with this "When God Doesn't answer your prayers" by Jerry Sittser (who also wrote a great book - A Grace Disguised-about losing his family in a car crash etc)
Regarding your words on 'free will' I totally agree - The best book i've ever read on this subject is called "The Really Bad Thing about Free Will" - see here http://www.starkehartmann.com/free_enlarged.htm
We love you Steve ♥
ReplyDeleteI totally agree about the free will thing....but I never heard anyone else say what I believe..thanks for sharing...I loved all of it. I always think of Joseph saying to his brothers..God meant it for good....I need to come up with a way to type out with out all these ellipses..
ReplyDeleteIn Him
Elaine
Paradoxes like Steve said, in Thursday's blog will abound until Jesus returns. Keeping perspective and our eyes clear is good. We need to hear the Word of God to maintain our godly vision and keep it improving to growth capacity. We can be prepared, and trained for any good work in God's hands as we're so available for Him to use us. Jesus spoke in parables remember so a whole group of people could see better and another whole group wouldn't. There is room to repent and seek God's face knowing there is life and death in the power of the tongue and some eat the fruit thereof. Even lifestyle speaks louder than our words at times. Be ready in season and out. Use words when necesary John Wesley said. If you're going to correct someone's error in the Church, bless them first, and speak the truth in love, first taking the log out your own eye and being attentively humble in accordance with Gal. 6:1 lest you're tempted too. Say in faith with love. Mt 28:19,20 is not the Great Suggestion so.. on your road when you preach the Gospel do disciple others as well: The Great Commission. It's good to realize God is good even in the worst events life throws at us & God can be trusted. Fantastic Blog Steve.
ReplyDeleteFor my Brother OUT OF THE COLLECTIVE : Be of good cheer my friend. Don't discount a miraculous and merciful divine intervention in the last nanoseconds of your dad's life. God gets to make the final call and He loves you.
ReplyDeleteHi Steve
ReplyDeleteAnother great thought provoking blog. Just read some of “The Foolishness of Preaching” by Robert Farrar Capon. He says on page 35 …”As I’ve said, what Adam and Eve did in the Garden was to jury –rig an essentially religious system for getting the management of good and evil out of God’s hands and into theirs.” Page 36….”In short a parallel universe inside their own heads- and then with the weapons of their own wisdom, they invoked that universe inside the midst of this one and started a war against reality”
Reality is still Father, Son and Holy Spirit, who they are and what they have done for all humanity! I believe it is not about control or allowing, it is simply about what is real. Until my own universe or religious knowledge crumbles I will never come to see and know what Jesus has created and redeemed before the creation of the world.
Steve, when you started on the "free will" thing, I became a little concerned that you had gone Calvin on me. After all if God is sovereign, then can't He choose who is saved and who isn't? But His love superceeds that and He allows us to choose to accept Him or not. You are correct in defining "free will" as being a decision made in a vacuum without any outside influences. No one makes that kind of decision. Thanks for your teaching!!
ReplyDeleteI'm a little confused about this Steve.
ReplyDeleteIf it's all God's will, everything that happens, then why would you pray about anything or try to make anything better for anyone.
And what about the authority Jesus gave us, and the great commission? (Mark 16) - that believers will lay hands on sick people and they will get well. Jesus saw the sick and He laid hands on them and healed them - that indicates to me that He hated sickness. And He said we had the authority to do the same.
Are you suggesting that we just accept sickness etc because it's God's will anyway? I'm sure you couldn't mean this so I must be not understanding properly.
Because if I think: oh well it's all God's will anyway, that just makes me kind of passive and want to give up. I do understand that He does have a plan, but surely we should not just accept people suffering and say well it's all in His plan?
Please clarify for me, thanks
Good questions, Tashie. Why do we pray? Certainly not to change God's mind or convince Him to do something. We pray because it is His ordained way for us to join in with the work He is going to do. It is His gift to us, allowing us to participate in the process.
ReplyDeleteJesus did give us authority, in many areas of daily living. It is His will for us to exercise that authority, trusting Him to do His work through us. Again, it's a participatory gift He shares with us in love.
Your question about what we are to accept and not accept is too complex to answer here in this short space. Here's a general answer: We accept that our God is a loving Father whom we can trust 100%. We accept that He will accomplish His purposes in our lives and situations. We accept that we live by the faith of Jesus Christ who loved us and gave Himself for us. Far from leading to passivity, absolute trust in the sovereignty of our God leads us to an active faith in Him that causes us to praise and trust Him in every circumstance of life. We can move forward presuming on His goodness and grace.
The bottom line is that trusting in the reality that He is in total control and that nothing is beyond His control will produce the peace that passes understanding.
I do appreciate your questions and your obvious zeal for grappling with truth.
great thoughts steve!!
ReplyDeleteA friend of mine helped me when dealing with apparent unanswered prayers regarding my dad. Here are his thoughts:
"The desire for God to hear our prayers can't be rationlised in normal ways. It's linked to God's own desire to hear our voices turned to Him. The reasons for prayer are not rationalistic but existential"
This shows why prayer is not like a candy machine.....Prayer is more about communing with God than simply 'getting answers'.