The existence of suffering in this world is a complex
subject that might cause many Christians and non-Christians
alike to question the love of God. But we must remember
that God is not the cause of our suffering. As Pat
reveals, often the problem is us.
Suffering touches everyone who lives on this planet.
All you have to do is pick up a daily newspaper or
listen to a news broadcast to know that a great many
people are suffering. They suffer because of automobile
accidents or because of terrible diseases or because
of crime. Some suffer because they were born in poverty,
others because they were born in countries ruled by
dictators. There are many causes of suffering, and
the list could go on for pages. But our question is
not concerned with causes. We are looking for the
reasons for suffering.
To say there is suffering because there is crime,
or because there are auto accidents, is not nearly
enough. Our question goes far beneath the surface,
where it hits at the very roots of human pain and
anguish.
The first thing to be said about suffering is that
most of it comes about because of the activities of
a powerful supernatural being called Satan, or the
devil. He delights in hurting man and in trying to
turn man away from God. Very often people blame God
when they suffer, but is it God's fault? Satan takes
great pride in seeing God gets the "credit"
for his misdeeds.
Suffering is also caused by man's rebellion against
God and by the evil in men's hearts. How much suffering
has been caused in the modern world, for instance,
by Communism, or by men hurting other men? Godless
dictators hurt their own people, and they hurt the
people of neighboring nations as well. Just consider
how much suffering has been caused, in this century
alone, by men such as Adolf Hitler, Josef Stalin,
and Mao Tse-tung. As the result of godless dictatorships,
there is suffering in the form of heartbreak.
You might say that suffering is a result of freedom.
God has given man a certain amount of freedom. If
man were merely a robot, an automaton, then God could
always force him to do what is right. But God gives
man the freedom either to love and obey Him or to
rebel against Him. When man rebels against God, he
hurts not only himself but also his fellow man.
Something else to remember about suffering is that
God set up certain natural laws to govern the universe.
If it were not for the law of gravity, we would all
go floating off into space. But that same law is going
to cause pain to people who jump from the tops of
tall buildings!
Consider the hurricane, the earth's way of releasing
pent-up heat and energy. Heat from the southern climates
has to move north and be discharged from the earth.
When that happens, it causes a violent wind to blow.
That wind, in turn, stirs up huge waves when it passes
over the ocean. The hurricane is not meant to cause
suffering, but if people ignore the warnings of nature,
they will be injured by hurricanes.
The same is true of fault lines, such as the San
Andreas Fault. Fault lines are necessary to keep the
earth from just breaking apart. But if people insist
upon building houses on the San Andreas Fault--as
they do--then they are going to suffer when an earthquake
comes. Such suffering does not result from God's intentions,
but comes rather from man's foolishness. We can either
go along with natural forces and accommodate ourselves
to them, or we can ignore them and be hurt by them.
Much sickness, too, is man-made. Some of it is because
of improper nutrition. People do not eat the right
things. God gives us natural sugar, but we bleach
it and make it white. We eat white bread, when whole
wheat is much better for us. God gives us naturally
fibrous fruit and plants, but we boil the fiber away.
We do the same thing with oranges, when we squeeze
the juice out of them and throw away the pulp, which
is a beneficial part. We also peel potatoes and eat
only the inside. In doing so, we throw away the part
that God made to help us stay healthy.
It is probable that 75 to 80 percent of the illnesses
in the United States are psychosomatic. We have not
learned to cast all our cares upon God, as we are
advised to do in I Peter 5:7, and so we let our worried
and harried minds make us sick.
We also make ourselves sick voluntarily through doing
such things as smoking cigarettes, drinking alcohol,
and ingesting drugs. Automobile accidents cause fifty-six
thousand deaths in our country each year--and half
of those involve drunken driving.
The technological state of our society contributes
to suffering too. If there were no automobiles, there
would be no deaths and injuries resulting from highway
accidents. Our air would not be polluted with smoke
from factories and automobile exhaust if there were
no cars and factories. All of these things are part
of the price we pay for our state of civilization.
If we do not want to pay the price, we can go back
to a more primitive society. In today's world, our
lifestyle is a large contributor to sickness and disease.
To illustrate again how man contributes to his own
suffering, consider what has happened in Africa. The
northern plain of that continent was once a beautiful,
fertile, wooded area. But over several centuries,
people cut down all the trees. As a result, the topsoil
eroded and there was nothing left but desert. Without
the protective cover of the trees, temperatures in
the region rose steadily. The people moved farther
south, seeking fertile land. As they moved southward,
they continued cutting the trees, and consequently
the desert moved southward. Today there are three-and-a-half
million square miles of desert in the northern part
of Africa. In northern Africa and in many other areas
of the world, men have disturbed the ecological balance
in nature. As a result, poverty and hunger are worse
and worse.
India has a similar problem. India was once one of
the most fertile lands in the entire world. But the
Indian people have embraced a philosophy that says
rats and cows are sacred. So the cows eat up much
of the vegetation, and the rats devour a good deal
of the grain. Given a new understanding of nature,
proper agricultural techniques, a forestation program,
and a cleansing of rivers, which are now polluted,
India could be agriculturally self-sustaining.
The problem is not caused by an act of God, but it
stems from man's foolishness
over a period of years, perhaps centuries. And the
problems are steadily compounded
over successive generations.
There are other forms of suffering that men bring
on themselves. Consider, for example, such diseases
as genital herpes, syphilis, gonorrhea, and AIDS.
These all result from a conscious lifestyle that is
opposed to God's Word and breaks God's laws. God did
not send herpes. It is a natural consequence of immorality.
When it spreads, it becomes an incurable disease,
affecting millions and millions of people.
Why does God allow this to happen? When we ask this
question, it brings us back to the statement that
God has created man as a free being--free even to
the point of ruining much of God's creation. God has
sent preachers, prophets, and other holy men to warn
the people to change their ways but most will not
listen. They would not listen to the prophets four
thousand years ago, and most of them will not listen
today.
It is true that the righteous often suffer, and this
will continue as long as we live in a world of wickedness.
If someone speaks out against wickedness, he is going
to be involved in a struggle, and that struggle may
result in pain and suffering. Jesus said, "If
they persecuted Me, they will also persecute you"
(John 15:20).
Jesus Christ was the only perfect man who ever lived,
and people killed Him. Why? Because He came into contact
with evil and tried to do something about it. John
the Baptist was beheaded because he told people they
were breaking God's laws (see Mark 6:25-28). It has
been true throughout the ages that those who are God's
messengers are often set upon and hurt by the people
they have tried to warn. That kind of suffering is
virtually unavoidable as long as we live in a wicked
world of superstition, hatred, and ignorance.
Suffering, if we allow it to, does have a way of
purifying us. Many people have had to suffer in order
to turn to God. Until they had their material things
stripped from them, and often their health taken away,
they had no desire for spiritual things.
Those who are suffering may be tempted to turn away
from God. They should never allow this to happen.
Instead, they should worship God and be blessed and
benefited, even in the midst of their suffering. Those
who hurt must remember that it is not God's will for
anyone to suffer.
They must remember, too, that He will intervene for
those who diligently seek Him. Thousands of people
can testify that God will intervene to relieve pain
and suffering, but this depends on a closeness and
an intimacy with Him. Should we, then, accept everything,
and thank God for whatever happens to us--good and
bad?
God answers this question specifically in the Bible.
"And we know that all things work together for
good to those who love God, to those who are the called
according to His purpose" (Romans 8:28).
It is important to understand that accepting things
is not the same thing as being resigned to them. You
must accept suffering without becoming bitter, and
you can accept it without resigning yourself to it.
It is not your "lot in life" to suffer.
Those who do suffer should never quit seeking God's
touch and asking Him to set them free. Jesus said,
"Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and
you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you.
For everyone who asks receives, and he who seeks finds,
and to him who knocks it will be opened" (Matthew
7:7-8). The key is to keep on asking, seeking, and
knocking.
One final word about suffering. There is a certain
amount of pain involved whenever growth is taking
place. When people are moving to a higher level of
intellectual activity, there is a struggle that has
to take place, and in that struggle there is pain.
When people who are great athletes are pushing through
the limits of endurance to get to new records, there
is constant pain. There is pain when you are running
a mile or two at top speed, when your lungs are gasping
and your body wants to quit. But there is also the
overwhelming joy that comes when you finally do break
through into that new dimension.
This kind of pain is not the same thing as suffering.
Some people do not recognize
the difference between the suffering that is caused
deliberately by evil and the pain that comes about
through striving to reach a new plateau of experience.
Such suffering merely marks the transition period
of going from one level of accomplishment to a higher
level.
All suffering is temporary. It will all pass away
when Jesus Himself returns to the earth. Revelation
21:4 reads: "And God will wipe away every tear
from their eyes; there shall be no more death, nor
sorrow, nor crying; and there shall be no more pain,
for the former things have passed away."