My gut instinct tells me that this blog is no place
to hash out great theological questions, but spend enough time watching your
father die, and theological questions become unavoidable. I suppose I’m tired
of debating with myself, tired of questions that have no answers. For the past
three and a half years this blog has been my own personal therapist, and much
cheaper than going to a real one, so I will open up this topic to you in the
hope that one of you will be able to provide a workable answer.
I have noticed, especially on Facebook, that
whenever a favorable wind blows through someone’s life, whenever difficult
circumstances suddenly work out for the best, or whenever some serendipitous
event or fortuitous windfall arrives, no matter how trivial, Christian people
are quick to give God the credit, usually with the horribly tedious formulation,
it’s a God thing. However, when God
is silent in the face of great unspeakable tragedy, when desperate prayers go
unanswered, when the imponderables of life arrive on the stage, God is given a
pass. We are told that it isn’t in God’s
timing, or that God is trying to teach some valuable lesson to someone,
somewhere, or what we are asking him to do isn’t in his will.
Over the past six months as I have watched the sad
deterioration of my Dad’s health, I have searched for answers to the question,
“why?” For what purpose does Dad endure such a pointless and debilitating
ordeal? For what reason is this part of God’s plan? I pray every night for God
to allow Dad to be reunited with my Mother. I pray that God will take him home,
peacefully in his sleep. But each day brings fresh suffering. I am forced to
the conclusion that God’s silence in this matter is either some form of benign
neglect, or that my Father’s suffering pleases him in some way, a possibility
that disturbs me greatly.
While I am aware that God is under no obligation to
answer every prayer that tumbles out of my imperfect heart, after all God isn’t
some cosmic vending machine. But with each passing day as I see what Dad’s life
has become, I sink further into despair and anger, and my feelings about God
become more and more ambivalent.
Maybe we have lapsed into too modern a conception of
who God is, proscribing ever more loving and compassionate characteristics to
him than are justified by the biblical record. You want to know what’s a God thing? How about judgment and wrath?
And from what I have observed over that last six months maybe pain and
humiliation are God thing’s too.
So, there you have it. It’s the classic problem of pain
I guess. Why do bad things happen to good people? If the purpose of Dad’s
suffering is to teach someone a lesson, then whoever you are and wherever you
are, please learn it already. We’re dying here.
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