On the sovereignty of God, Pastor John Piper
recently wrote, "Now God wills that evil for the sake of thousands of good
responses." (an a la Romans
8:28). And writing about John 9, when Jesus healed the blind man after his
disciples asked him, "Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he
was born blind," the good pastor wrote, "And I don’t doubt that Jesus
wanted 30 years’ worth of kind and faithful parenting from that man’s parents,
like he wants from many parents today who
have disabled children. And
what is God’s purpose? Well, one of his purposes is that beautiful
demonstrations of compassion be shown from these parents."
Imagine that, in one stroke of penmanship,
Pastor Piper justified the above acts of human suffering on a higher purpose
that is beyond human comprehension.
Pastor Piper’s theodicy is definitely eons-years away from mine in
sophistication and depth. I guess I am but a bookish caveman as compared to his
deep level of certainty in the divine sovereignty. In the shadowlands of faith,
I am still groping with the perplexity of gratuitous suffering while others
before me, I guess, have stepped out into the light with clarity of mind and
faith. In other words, they have made the leap of faith while I am still
hanging by the
existential cliff.
You see, enduring "30 years' worth of
kind and faithful parenting" under the yoke of unhealed blindness so as to
eke out a pound of compassion is a little overkill for me. Even if it were for
the "glory of God", and it was duly captured in a biblical passage for
timeless encouragement, I can think of other much worse scenarios of disability
and suffering that last more than 30 years, and the same will never make it to
any literature of faith. And should this be the case, am I to accept the
suggestion that it is all for the twin purposes of character development
(compassion) and divine glorification? Me
caveman is still groping.
Although I do not doubt that "whatever
doesn't kill you will make you stronger", I have to draw the line where
the ambushes of life are deliberately planted by the divine, and His
intervention intentionally withheld for an indefinite period of time, all of
which hints to a
divine conspiracy of sorts, so as to achieve a more purposeful
end, resulting in more compassion on the one hand and more glory on the
other.
Now then, many defenders of the faith will
remind me of this scripture about how the Lord will ultimately deliver and that
He is still in control: "The Lord
sends poverty and wealth; he humbles and he exalts. He raises the poor from the
dust and lifts the needy from the ash heap; he seats them with princes and has
them inherit
a throne of honor."
But still, there are groups not explicitly
mentioned in the passage that in this day and age seems even more prevalent, if
not relevant. They are the poor who dies pecking on the dust of the earth, the
needy wallowing in the ash heap throughout their life, and the rich - being far
from humble - looking out from their gated community with contempt and
arrogance; more like petty mercenaries than honored princes. Divine sovereignty with a pinch of
salt?
How about ultimate justice and fairness on
earth? Well even that can sometimes be sparingly applied, if not unevenly
distributed, in the world. Recently, a drug addict and murderer Richard Cobb
was executed in Texas. In 2002, in a robbery that had gone wrong, Cobb killed
one of the three people he abducted and raped the other. He admitted that he robbed
to finance his drug addiction. When asked for his last words, he
said,
"Life is death and death is life...life is too short." And when he
was injected with the lethal substance, he exclaimed, "Wow, that is great.
That is awesome! Thank you, warden!" What an ironic ending for a drug
addict, that is, to be killed by the same substance he regularly used when
alive to temporarily escape from this world.
Although Cobb was punished for his crime, he
left this world with little or no remorse. In fact, one of the victim's father
said, "I think
justice was served but it doesn't change anything to speak
of...all he did was go to sleep. That's it." Where’s the fairness in a life that rebels against everything that is
good?
So, if a test of theodicy were to be foisted
on me, I cannot expect myself to pass with flying colors because I won't have
much to argue or write about. Earthly explanations, or wistful ones, can only
bring me
so far. For every apologist's defence of the faith, there is a joinder
of issues that matches it with equal persuasive force.
Alas, if only divine providence takes over and
intervenes with a little less opacity, obscurity and abstraction, I could then
be less uncertain about my own Christian journey. But I guess this is how it is
going to be with faith. So, at a certain point, the fatherly hand that holds
mine will mysteriously let go without
me knowing and I will then discover that
the road of faith ahead is one that is uncharted and lonely.
It is sometimes like a fog of war with a faint
beam of light coming from a distant lighthouse and a soft bugle chorus wafting
through as my guide and I have to tread barefoot on the cold uncharted pathways
one cobblestone at a time towards the unlikely source.
This is my treacherous path of
theodicy. It is
not a garlanded road with clear directional maps and a ministration of cheery
aviary wooing, prodding and leading me forward. That would be too enchanting
for me and too convenient.
And as I take this lonely journey of faith, I must be
prepared to be surprised not by certainty, but by the testy enigma of the
unanswerable, the unknowable and the unfathomable. Cheerz.
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