 Why  do people get cancer? Why are there earthquakes that destroy entire  cities? Why do people have to work so hard just to have enough money to  barely feed their families?
Why  do people get cancer? Why are there earthquakes that destroy entire  cities? Why do people have to work so hard just to have enough money to  barely feed their families?
Subconsciously, we probably  ask ourselves questions like these quite often. But consciously we  rarely do. We’re so busy living our lives we rarely stop and wonder WHY?
But  then something happens to wake us up. Our parents get divorced. The  girl down the street gets abducted. A relative gets cancer. That wakes  us up for awhile. But then we can often sink back into the denial. That  is, until another tragedy hits, another incongruence. Then we’re likely  to think, Something isn’t right here. Something is really, really wrong.  This isn’t how life’s supposed to be!
So, WHY do bad things happen? WHY isn’t this world a better place?
There  is an answer to the WHY question, found in the Bible. But it’s not an  answer that most people like to hear: the world is the way it is because  it’s the world that we, in a sense, have asked for.
Sound strange?
What  or who could make this world different than the way it is? What or who  could guarantee that life is pain-free, for everyone, all the time?
God  could. God could accomplish that. But he doesn’t. At least not right  now. And we’re angry with him as a result. We say, “God can’t be  all-powerful and all-loving. If he were, this world wouldn’t be the way  it is!”
We say this hoping that God will then change  his position on the matter. Our hope is that putting a guilt trip on him  will make him change the way he’s doing things.
But he doesn’t seem to budge. WHY doesn’t he?
God  doesn’t budge — he doesn’t change things right now — because he’s  giving us what we asked for: a world where we get to treat him as though  he is absent and unnecessary.
Remember the story of  Adam and Eve? They ate the “forbidden fruit.” That fruit was the idea  that they could ignore what God said or gave them, and strike out on  life apart from God. For Adam and Eve sort of hoped that they could  become like God, without God. They consumed the notion that there was  something more valuable in existence than God himself, something more  valuable than having a personal relationship with God. And this world  system — with all of its faults — came as a result of the choice they  made.
Their story is the story of all of us, isn’t it?  Who hasn’t said — if not audibly at least in their hearts – God, I think  I can do this without you. I’ll just go this one alone. But thanks for  the offer.
We’ve all tried to make life work without  God. Why do we do that? Probably because we’ve all bought the notion  that there’s something more valuable, more important, than God. For  different people it’s different things, but the mindset is the same: God  isn’t what’s most important in life. In fact, I’d just as soon do it  without him altogether.
What is God’s response to that?
He  allows it. Many people experience the painful results of others’ or  their own choices that run contrary to God’s ways…murder, sexual abuse,  greed, lying/fraud, slander, adultery, kidnapping, etc. All of these can  be explained by people who have refused to give God access and  influence over their lives. They are going about their lives as they see  fit, and they and others suffer.
What’s God view on  all of this? He’s not smug. In fact, God could rightly be viewed as  leaning forward, compassionate, hoping we will turn to him so that he  can bring real life to us. Jesus said, “Come to me, all who are weary  and heavy-laden, and I will give you rest.”1 But not all are willing to  go to him. Jesus commented on this when he said: “O Jerusalem,  Jerusalem, you who kill the prophets and stone those sent to you, how  often I have longed to gather your children together, as a hen gathers  her chicks under her wings, but you were not willing.”2 Again, Jesus  brings the issue back to our relationship with him. “I am the light of  the world. He who follows me will not walk in darkness, but will have  the light of life.”3
But what about when life is  unfair? What about those horrible circumstances that hit us in life,  caused by someone other than ourselves? When we are feeling victimized,  it’s useful to realize that God himself endured horrendous treatment  from others. God more than understands what you are going through.
There  is nothing in life that could be more painful than what Jesus endured  on our behalf, when he was deserted by his friends, ridiculed by those  who would not believe in him, beaten and tortured before his  crucifixion, then nailed to a cross, in shameful public display, dying  of slow suffocation. He created us, yet allowed humanity the freedom to  do this, to fulfill Scripture and to set us free from our sin. This was  no surprise to Jesus. He was aware of what was coming, foreknowing all  the details, all the pain, all the humiliation. “And as Jesus was going  up to Jerusalem, he took the twelve disciples aside, and on the way he  said to them, ‘Behold, we are going up to Jerusalem, and the Son of man  will be delivered to the chief priests and scribes, and they will  condemn him to death, and deliver him to the Gentiles to be mocked and  scourged and crucified, and he will be raised on the third day.”4
Imagine  knowing something that awful was going to happen to you. Jesus  understands emotional and psychological anguish. The night that Jesus  knew they would arrest him, he went to pray, but took some friends with  him. “And taking with him Peter and the two sons of Zebedee, he began to  be sorrowful and troubled. Then he said to them, ‘My soul is very  sorrowful, even to death; remain here and watch [keep awake] with me.  And going a little farther he fell on his face and prayed, ‘My Father,  if it be possible, let this cup pass from me; nevertheless, not as I  will but as thou wills.”5 Though Jesus confided in his three friends,  they didn’t understand the depth of his torment, and when Jesus returned  from prayer he found them asleep. Jesus understands what it’s like  going through pain and extreme sadness alone.
Here it  is summarized, as John describes in his gospel: “He was in the world,  and the world was made through him, yet the world knew him not. He came  to his own home, and his own people received him not. But to all who  received him, who believed in his name, he gave power to become children  of God.”6 “For God sent the Son into the world, not to condemn the  world, but that the world might be saved through him. For God so loved  the world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should  not perish but have eternal life.”7
There is no  question that there is pain and intense suffering in this world. Some of  it is explained by selfish, hateful actions on the part of others. Some  of it defies an explanation in this life. But God offers us himself.  God gives us the knowledge that he has endured also, and is aware of our  pain and needs. Jesus said to his disciples, “Peace I leave with you;  my peace I give to you; not as the world gives do I give to you. Let not  your hearts be troubled, neither let them be afraid.”8There is ample  reason to be afraid, troubled, but God can give us his peace, which is  greater than the problem before us. He is after all, God, the Creator.  The one who has always existed. The one who created a universe on the  backstroke.
Yet even in his power, he’s also the one  who knows us intimately, even the smallest, insignificant details. And  if we will trust him with our lives, relying on him, though we encounter  difficulties, he will hold us securely. Jesus said, “These things I  have spoken to you, so that in me you may have peace. In the world you  have tribulation, but take courage; I have overcome the world.”9 He went  through our ultimate threat — death — and overcame it. He can take us  through the difficult circumstances of this life, and then bring us into  eternal life, if we will trust him.
We can either go  through this life with God or without him. Jesus prayed, “O righteous  Father, although the world has not known you, yet I have known you; and  these have known that you sent me; and I have made your name known to  them, and will make it known, so that the love with which you loved me  may be in them, and I in them.”10
(1) Matthew 11:28
(2) Matthew 23:37
(3) John 8:12
(4) Matthew 20:17-19
(5) Matthew 26:37-39
(6) John 1:10-12
(7) John 3:17,16
(8) John 14:27
(9) John 16:33
(10) John 17:25,26
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