Last week’s Sabbath School lesson was about Job. In our discussion group at church yesterday we talked about prayer and why God apparently answers some prayers and not others. That’s something I’ve wrestled with a lot. Here are some of my thoughts:
If God answered our every prayer for help, how would that affect our motives for serving him? Would it make us “rice Christians”? As in the story about Job, would Satan accuse us of serving God because of what he does for us? Would we be like the heathen who offer sacrifices to their gods in order to secure their favor and protection? There’s a fine line here. God does sustain our world and provide for our needs, and of course we ought to be thankful to him for his blessings. But does he intervene in the natural world of cause and effect?
When a person misses their flight and the plane crashes on take-off, killing everyone, did God save the life of that one person, while not protecting all those on the flight? How do we understand why some babies are born with terrible handicaps, while others are normal and healthy? Are these just the random consequences of living on a fallen, sin-damaged earth? Is it possible that God does occasionally intervene for some deeper reason that we may not understand?
Some requests certainly are much simpler for God to grant than others. “Lord, help me find my keys” can be answered as God impresses us to look in a certain place. But “Lord, please help my son find faith in you again” may take many years and interwoven circumstances to accomplish.
In my own life, God has answered prayers that I never prayed, while seemingly ignoring one that I’ve been praying for years. You see, for much of my life I’ve struggled with a food dependency problem, and I’ve pray with many tears for victory over this. I’m still struggling, but in the meantime, God has used certain life circumstances to help me learn how to forgive and to overcome my judgmentalism – two problems I wasn’t really aware I had! So why am I still struggling with the food addiction? Maybe because I’m focusing on it too much? Or maybe because God saw the other two areas were more important?
A lot of people wonder why God allows pain and sorrow, if he has the power to prevent it. This is the answer I have been taught: There is a real force of evil in our world. The Bible says that force is embodied in Satan. God created us with the power of choice – free will – because he wanted our love, and we could not choose to love him without freedom. The first humans chose to listen to Satan’s deception and our world came under his dominion. Satan is the author of pain and sorrow. God has let him try his way of governing our world, but when evil has fully shown its results God will destroy Satan and bring about his kingdom of love and peace. In the meantime, God is with us in our suffering and brings something good out of it, helping us learn important lessons.
For the most part, that answer satisfies me, but it does seem like the fruits of evil should be fully evident by now. Isn’t it time for God to bring an end to suffering?
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