Even though Ravi Zacharias is my number one favorite thinker and religious philosopher on the planet - I held off reading this for a long while. I assumed it would be all emotional and depressing (with many hints of HOPE, it is Ravi after all) and go into great detail about old Job and other Bible character's sufferings and trials. As essential as this topic is, it's just not my fight right now - soon perhaps.
But I loved it. AS I do all Ravi's books.
I've found most of my answers to comprehending human suffering a few years ago ("Cough, that Bible book God have us centuries ago"). So no reason to endlessly go researching how to beat a dead horse. Suffering is what it is, and i've spent time coming to grips with it. But There's NOT a Ravi book or video that i'm not eager to embrace. So the time came to read this...
And it was essential. This book should have been bigger though. This is a bit of a starter kit for making sense of suffering. There's a reason God's book has around a 1000 pages and is jammed packed - It's NOT necessarily for beginners. But i'm thinking that many who are suffering are in need of some quick comprehension and application. For that: thanks Ravi and Vince Vitale.
So "Why suffering? Finding meaning and comfort when life doesn't make sense".
If life makes perfect sense, then simply move on and live out your days. AND PLEASE STOP COMPLAINING ABOUT YOUR PROBLEMS (we all complain endlessly). But for the rest of us that are inquisitive about our challenges and purposes; we need to learn to think and question things like Ravi and Vince do. And this book shows us how.
The problem is:
Some folks find comfort in a lie. Atheists claim to find a meaning that offers Zero hope. Buddhists and Hindu's claim the meaning is to be ignored and treated as an illusion. Cults assume we must overcome our suffering with works and desperation. But Christianity and Jesus? It claims Suffering is a relationship with eternal value and purpose - it brings out the best and WORST in us. And our Jesus embraced suffering with us to show the depths of HIS LOVE.
Give us a natural disaster: and we'll show you a humanity that puts aside its selfish desires and learns to apply Love and Compassion. If we had a world with no danger - i'm betting we'd be so bored with pleasure and profit that we simply cease to care. (so why won't this happen in Heaven? Because we won't have a fleshly human nature, we will have a NEW nature that looks to a Kingly Savior for joy and purpose. Not alot of that happening down here. And with Jesus as our eternal King: what HE says will have full agreement amongst his people. There could be nothing better)
So what's in this book exactly?
Suffering AND pain... and how to see it through God's eyes. And how we annoying humans see it.
The problem is most people don't think very deeply about it. They just apply pure and total emotion to their predicament (which is why JOB showed us friends can come in handy, or in hindrance.)
No getting around it - pain hits us emotionally. All of the logic in the universe won't make us dismiss our pain with a smile or wink. God knew we would need it to have deep healthy relationships, and it tests those relationships. (remember that Bible verse: "Jesus wept.")
AS much as i've heard endless atheists accuse God of NOT being loving and there to stop the pain and suffering - I seldom see them apply that same logic to parenting their own children. To not allow for any chance of pain is to not allow a loving freedom to your children. Have you ever met those kids that were so coddled by insane protective parents that they were unfit to ever have a job or spouse or risky vacation or hobby? No extreme sports for them, not even a rowdy trip to the Water-slide park. These people won't even have pets because of the risk to their children. Hmmm, i'm glad we don't have a God like that. (and so is my DOG!)
So: Can God stop Evil?
Sure he can, who wants to go first? ... hmmm, nobody it seems. folks insist only OTHER people's freedom's be restricted.
Funny enough, for all those people who blame God for not stopping evil. They are the first to complain about all the times God ACTUALLY DID stop evil (remember NOAH'S flood in the Bible? The stopping of the Canaanites? Death of the Egyptians? God killing Annanias & Sapphira in the New Testament? God making a HELL to separate those who love HIS SON from those who refuse to?)
Stopping evil and suffering is not a challenge for God.
And dealing with it properly causes us to rely on HIM.
It's a game perfectly played.
____________________
Here's a good chapter heading: "The Pain of Painlessness"
Yes, often pain is a good thing. It tells us amazing and essential things. Even though modern doctors tell us to take a pill whenever we are uncomfortable - this can hide the warning system that announces there's a HUGE FREAKIN' PROBLEM coming. Kind of like a loud siren that warns of a coming Monsoon, imagine somebody asking if the siren could be turned down a little so they can enjoy their favorite TV show??? And that is the blessing of pain. It means something is wrong. Pay attention.
I could quote endlessly from this book. Here's a few:
(pg. 29)
When belief in God becomes difficult, the tendency is to turn away from him-but in heaven's name to what? When Jesus asked the twelve disciples closest to Him whether they too would desert Him with the rest of His disciples, Peter replied for all us down through the ages when he said, "Lord, to whom shall we go?" (John 6:68) Where can one go for an answer?
(pg. 35)
"the point is clear that if God is the author of life, He has an answer to suffering. If something indeed came from nothing then nothing is really the answer to suffering. But if we are the creation of a personal, moral, infinite, loving God, then He will have the answer for us."
If there is no god: then I don't think the Universe likes us. Best to just wait for an asteroid to pummel into us and halt our bickering.
They quote G.K. Chesterton a few times. Here's a good one:
(pg. 38)
"With God as the prime mover, an explanation for everything else can be found... (similar to) the sun is the one created thing we cannot look at, but it is the means by which we look at the rest of creation. Like the sun, it is the spiritual that gives light to and explains everything else."
Here's a rare moment of truth:
(pg. 39)
"I remember a young woman once saying to me through her tears, "Let no one ever tell you that divorce is easy. It is the ultimate form of inner shattering."...A broken love means a broken life. Love enters the deepest recesses of who we are. When love is plundered, the loneliness one is left with is agonizing... Why did we walk away from the love of God? We made a free choice. We DIVORCED Him."
So that's some of the stuff in this book. REAL issues we must deal with in a broken reality. Some claim because there are issues - There must be no god. I say it's the opposite. Since we aren't simply meaningless weeds growing and dying on a backwater planet - There must be a GOD.
__________
Here's a fun final quote:
(pg. 184)
"I find it interesting to note that when we create worlds -movie worlds, for instance- we too, tend not to create utopias with no possibility of suffering. Without the possibility of serious suffering, there would be no Frodo, no Forrest Gump, no Superman (no FAST AND FURIOUS part 5). The difference, someone might point out, is that in the movie worlds things work out well in the end. But of course, according to the Christian story, that will also be the case with our world."
So, this book is much better than I expected. And it goes into numerous philosophical and physical areas of suffering. There are some great personal stories by Ravi and Vince. And there are indeed answers FROM A GOD - A god who allowed himself to suffer WITH and FOR us.