I'd like to discuss my interpretation of suffering. I'll try to be as succinct as possible, for the sake of understanding.
Often there is a question of morality in relation to God. A question of why he would allow suffering, if he does exist. I take this to mean either one of two things:
1. Evil and God are incompatible
2. Suffering and God are incompatible
1.
The first is self-refuting, simply because there is no objective moral values without God, the moral law giver. Therefore, asserting that a benevolent God is incompatible with a world where evil exists presupposes that there is good in this world in which to differentiate between the said evil, or what not "ought" to be. And if there is good, then there must be some sort of moral law that distinguishes what good is. And if there's a moral law, then there must be a source for the law, which would be God.
2.
So after the first affirmation is reduced to moral relativism or evolutionary convergence, the essence of it then evolves into the second affirmation, which was the point of the thread. How can God allow suffering if he is benevolent? Why are there things such as natural disasters and accidents and crime?
I'd like to first assert the problem of crime. In the Bible, there are countless examples of people being given the choice to do things. In fact, almost everyone who was ever born has been given the free choice to sin or not. This is the key, I believe, to understand the allowance of an intelligent disaster.
Because intervention in one's choices would directly contradict the very freewill that God intends for most of us to use to come to responsibility. No damage = no crime. Therefore, if God intends for us to become responsible, and to rid us of sin, then the nonintervention for the choices that we make is necessary to preserve freewill, and the nonintervention in the damage done is necessary to make us accountable for the choices that we make. Because otherwise, the action doesn't count, which is the core concept of repentance.
In a question of natural disasters, let's unpack the statement first. What is it that we're asking? Is it that things like tornadoes and hurricanes and earthquakes are incompatible with a benevolent God? I feel that this is often a prevarication of the implication, and appeals to a mass misunderstanding of the Biblical relationship with life and death. First let's assert what it is that we're having a problem with. It's the notion that God could've done something to save the innocent party involved, and didn't. Is this unfair?
To better understand this, it's important to know what happens after you die. God says that to be absent from the body is to be present with the lord. We are also described to have immortal bodies. So what does the word "immortality" tell us? That we are not dead. The very reason that the act of killing someone is unfair is because of life's sacredness in as far as it concerns us. The question is, what's the difference in how we are now, and when we're in our spiritual bodies?
It's just that, we are in perfect and immortal forms in our spiritual bodies. So if we're still alive, then does that mean that anything unfair has been done? Only if God couldn't govern each state of being fairly. The reason why it's considered "killing" when we are responsible for someone's life on Earth ending is because we haven't the power to enable the said life on Earth in the first place. God has this power. Therefore, it's not unfair when he is responsible for our life on Earth ending.
Second, let's assert the significance of tornadoes, hurricanes, and earthquakes in their essences. As aforementioned, the reason that all of these are unfair is because the innocent party involved in each of them often dies. So again, what is it that we're asking? It's why God doesn't intervene. This is a "slippery slope" simply because, where does it end? If it's unfair for God not to stop hurricanes, is it unfair for God not to stop old age? Because in both, God has the power to stop the innocent person from dying. We'd then be asking, why didn't God just make us immortal in these bodies to begin with, since he has the power to do so. Why would he put us here on Earth to watch us eventually die?
This is where we go back to the aforementioned point of why it's not unfair for God being responsible for us not being immortal in these flesh bodies. Because we're not really dead when we actually leave life here on Earth, and he has the power to put us here in the first place.
But it's not the time that makes it significant, but rather, the actions that we do with the given time. If God were to extend our lives just for the sake of the innocent party involved, wouldn't this directly contradict the point of why we're here, which is to be responsible? How then can one be responsible for our sins if we don't pray and repent? That's the point of why accidents exist.
Because if people never died from disasters or suffered, then you'll have the problem of people either not being subject to repent of their sins until they're on their deathbeds, or people having no reason to come to God for his blessings. In almost the same sense as before, it would contradict the point of having the choice to pray if there is nothing to pray for. And there would be nothing to pray for if nothing bad happened outside of what we could handle ourselves.
And for those who don't get the chance to hear the word of God before their accidental death, He is always just.
__________________________________________________________________
I understand that my logic may be flawed, and I do not mean to lead astray anyone seeking truth. I only recommend that you take everything with a grain of salt and see what say the Lord first and foremost. I just wanted to give some understanding and comfort through my own perspective of this subject. Thank you for reading and God bless you.
Often there is a question of morality in relation to God. A question of why he would allow suffering, if he does exist. I take this to mean either one of two things:
1. Evil and God are incompatible
2. Suffering and God are incompatible
1.
The first is self-refuting, simply because there is no objective moral values without God, the moral law giver. Therefore, asserting that a benevolent God is incompatible with a world where evil exists presupposes that there is good in this world in which to differentiate between the said evil, or what not "ought" to be. And if there is good, then there must be some sort of moral law that distinguishes what good is. And if there's a moral law, then there must be a source for the law, which would be God.
2.
So after the first affirmation is reduced to moral relativism or evolutionary convergence, the essence of it then evolves into the second affirmation, which was the point of the thread. How can God allow suffering if he is benevolent? Why are there things such as natural disasters and accidents and crime?
I'd like to first assert the problem of crime. In the Bible, there are countless examples of people being given the choice to do things. In fact, almost everyone who was ever born has been given the free choice to sin or not. This is the key, I believe, to understand the allowance of an intelligent disaster.
Because intervention in one's choices would directly contradict the very freewill that God intends for most of us to use to come to responsibility. No damage = no crime. Therefore, if God intends for us to become responsible, and to rid us of sin, then the nonintervention for the choices that we make is necessary to preserve freewill, and the nonintervention in the damage done is necessary to make us accountable for the choices that we make. Because otherwise, the action doesn't count, which is the core concept of repentance.
In a question of natural disasters, let's unpack the statement first. What is it that we're asking? Is it that things like tornadoes and hurricanes and earthquakes are incompatible with a benevolent God? I feel that this is often a prevarication of the implication, and appeals to a mass misunderstanding of the Biblical relationship with life and death. First let's assert what it is that we're having a problem with. It's the notion that God could've done something to save the innocent party involved, and didn't. Is this unfair?
To better understand this, it's important to know what happens after you die. God says that to be absent from the body is to be present with the lord. We are also described to have immortal bodies. So what does the word "immortality" tell us? That we are not dead. The very reason that the act of killing someone is unfair is because of life's sacredness in as far as it concerns us. The question is, what's the difference in how we are now, and when we're in our spiritual bodies?
It's just that, we are in perfect and immortal forms in our spiritual bodies. So if we're still alive, then does that mean that anything unfair has been done? Only if God couldn't govern each state of being fairly. The reason why it's considered "killing" when we are responsible for someone's life on Earth ending is because we haven't the power to enable the said life on Earth in the first place. God has this power. Therefore, it's not unfair when he is responsible for our life on Earth ending.
Second, let's assert the significance of tornadoes, hurricanes, and earthquakes in their essences. As aforementioned, the reason that all of these are unfair is because the innocent party involved in each of them often dies. So again, what is it that we're asking? It's why God doesn't intervene. This is a "slippery slope" simply because, where does it end? If it's unfair for God not to stop hurricanes, is it unfair for God not to stop old age? Because in both, God has the power to stop the innocent person from dying. We'd then be asking, why didn't God just make us immortal in these bodies to begin with, since he has the power to do so. Why would he put us here on Earth to watch us eventually die?
This is where we go back to the aforementioned point of why it's not unfair for God being responsible for us not being immortal in these flesh bodies. Because we're not really dead when we actually leave life here on Earth, and he has the power to put us here in the first place.
But it's not the time that makes it significant, but rather, the actions that we do with the given time. If God were to extend our lives just for the sake of the innocent party involved, wouldn't this directly contradict the point of why we're here, which is to be responsible? How then can one be responsible for our sins if we don't pray and repent? That's the point of why accidents exist.
Because if people never died from disasters or suffered, then you'll have the problem of people either not being subject to repent of their sins until they're on their deathbeds, or people having no reason to come to God for his blessings. In almost the same sense as before, it would contradict the point of having the choice to pray if there is nothing to pray for. And there would be nothing to pray for if nothing bad happened outside of what we could handle ourselves.
And for those who don't get the chance to hear the word of God before their accidental death, He is always just.
__________________________________________________________________
I understand that my logic may be flawed, and I do not mean to lead astray anyone seeking truth. I only recommend that you take everything with a grain of salt and see what say the Lord first and foremost. I just wanted to give some understanding and comfort through my own perspective of this subject. Thank you for reading and God bless you.
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