Bible Study Course: Lesson 4 - Why Does God Allow Suffering?
Introduction
"The most overwhelming objection to belief that there is a wise and
loving power behind the universe is the existence of so much pain and anguish
in the world"— Richard Harries, author
We tend to be comfortable believing in God when all is going our way. But let
tragedy strike and we can quickly begin to doubt His very existence.
Look at the spiritual condition of the world. Agnostics—people who declare
their skepticism of the existence of a supreme, intelligent Creator who controls
the universe—influence educational, scientific and governmental policies. The
existence of suffering in the world is one of the most common justifications
for agnostics' lack of belief and faith in God.
Not understanding the reasons that suffering abounds, they conclude that neither
God nor religion offers answers to the world's problems. As British historian
and author Paul Johnson observed: "I suspect that the problem of evil drives
more thoughtful people away from religion than any other difficulty."
In Europe, for example, agnosticism is rampant. There the erosion of religious
faith began in earnest when the enormity of the suffering and death of World
War I hit home to the millions of surviving Europeans. More than 10 million
had died and another 20 million had been wounded in that massive conflict.
As British author David L. Edwards wrote: "The experience in Europe in
the age of science repeatedly shows that belief in God can be overwhelmed by
suffering" (The Futures of Christianity, p. 339). He explained
how this came about: "The first world war was the great [religious] catastrophe.
It did less physical damage than the second world war-but far more damage to
Christianity . . . Very little in the traditions of the European churches
had equipped them for the spiritual crisis . . . They all encouraged
their members to pray for victory and safety, only to find that a cloud of poison
gas obscured all the doctrines which had seemed so bright in days of peace . . .
It was a war that did great damage to the old style of the churches' teaching
that God was in control like the clergyman in his parish" (pp. 306-307).
Since then most Europeans have come to believe that faith in God is hardly
justifiable. Many have expressed the opinion that God was deaf to anguished
cries emanating from the rain-soaked trenches of World War I and the Nazi death
camps of World War II. This wave of doubt has been so great in Europe that in
some areas many ancient church buildings have been sold for use as bookshops,
office space and even nightclubs.
How do we reconcile anguish and suffering with the Bible's portrayal of a
loving God? Why would He allow the horrendous miseries that afflict humanity?
Does the Bible explain suffering? Does it reveal a God who can exercise control
over the universe? If He has that kind of power, why doesn't He immediately
put an end to misery?
Many people, the faithful and the faithless, look at calamities—whether personal,
national or global—and agonize over these questions. In this lesson we will
see how the Bible addresses this enigma: Why does God allow suffering?
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