Secular culture has, in many ways, pushed against the thought tradition and eschatological explanations of the Church regarding suffering-- Thus, perhaps, the particular relevance of Pope St. John Paul's Salvifici Doloris, wherein JPII reexamines the mystery of suffering as meaningful, redemptive, and an opportunity to encounter the Divine. The Church has, of course, reaped abundantly from the harvest that is this thought tradition represented to us by JPII; But is there anything that the Church can take and benefit from about the secular perspective on suffering? That is, that suffering is entirely meaningless, senseless violence. Can it add or bring anything to the Christian discussion of suffering? Yes, most certainly. There are two areas in particular where, I believe, the Christian discussion actually sorely lacks, and for that reason can sometimes fail to properly evangelize and assist in the healing of those in the depths of sorrow and suffering.
The first is the honesty about the horror and absurdity of suffering, particularly in not diminishing it or inserting meaning in order to make it feel smaller. Secular recognition of suffering's senselessness allows for a pause-- looking around at a profoundly broken world, and putting forth an authentic admission of pain. It is not uncommon for the Faithful to gloss over suffering with what can seem to those suffering to be merely pious platitudes. These "platitudes" can even, sometimes, deny the reality of suffering. And indeed, there is a dimension of faithful response to suffering which can help one escape the torment of the suffering, even if the practical reality is not diminished. But we must understand this: to suffer, and to feel genuine pain without "dissociating" from pain through spiritual exercises of trust is actually modeled for us by Christ himself. Dissociation involves mentally detaching oneself from traumatic experiences. Although this can be used as a coping mechanism essential for survival, Jesus Christ's perfect humanity would suggest to us that he fully embraced and endured the suffering of his Passion and Death without attempting to escape via mental detachment. At all times, his mind and body were perfectly united to one another, as man is designed to be. This willingness to enter fully into the reality of his human experience of suffering displayed most perfectly his love for all of man, and it enabled him to truly empathize with us. When any of us suffer, we can have peace knowing that we are perfectly known in our suffering-- and, further, our suffering has been experienced by God Himself. There is not a fragment of our lives divorced from God's omniscience. This is a profound aspect of the secular perspective on suffering that Christians would benefit to allow into the conversation more: to sit with the reality of suffering, recognize it as profound and horrific, and not brush past it. In allowing it to be what it is and not diminishing it, God is glorified even more because His power is made manifest to a greater magnitude.
Further, still on the point of recognizing the absurdity of suffering, there is a significant portion of Sacred Scripture devoted to men like Job and King Solomon in Ecclesiastes who acknowledged the abyss of meaningless of their suffering. And then, in response to that meaningless, demonstrated an even higher kind of faith. They did not choose to deny it or dissociate from it, but rather, to face it squarely. Job, in his immense distress and anguish, laments, "though I cry 'Violence!' I get no response." And then, "God has wronged me and drawn his net around me." He is not seeking to deny the reality of his suffering. But his response continues to be faith in God, despite the urging of even his own wife to turn his back on and curse God. Calling back to The Present Age, we see Kierkegaard's paradox illumined: a man who experiences immense, absurd suffering, and yet clings to God. Kierkegaard would have called this "absurd faith," which is evidence of one of the deepest kinds of trust that does not seek to run or avoid the senselessness of suffering, but rather, allows oneself to dwell in it. The Church would respond to this, however, and say that it is not absurd-- it is superreasonable. To have such a faith as this is to be aligned with Perfect Reason. God Himself is this perfect reason that transcends all else. Embracing the seeming absurdity and "meaninglessness" that the secular world associates with suffering is actually a path to more perfect faith in God, for when we reason through our suffering and insert meaning into it, it can sometimes be an attempt to heal the pain ourselves, not through God.
Ultimately, the secular perspective does offer a view of suffering that-- while not whole-- is the beginning of a deep font of spiritual truth that ought to be incorporated into the Christian discussion of suffering, and ultimately into the Christian life.