Thursday, 6 February 2014

When Culture Suffers



As Scripture indicates, each Christian should be ready to give both a credible answer and a sensitive, listening ear to important questions such as “why does God allow suffering?” A credible answer alone may provide little more than some intellectual comfort, while a listening ear alone could still lead to despair. The grieving mother is not seeking after stock answers, just as much as the cynic is not after sympathy. There are no answers in vacuums. 

There are many places a Christian might go to help explain the role of suffering. Yet all apologetic responses must be able to live at the cross. Not only should answers be able to live there, but the best responses are able to lead us there. For instance, a God who only allows suffering, yet without purpose, is not the God displayed at the cross. The cross demonstrates that the goal of God is not to give witty answers to problematic apologetic questions. The cross provides a solution, not merely slick answers. At the same time, the cross must be intimately related to the answers we choose to give.

But to take a step back, the assertion that “if the God of the Bible existed, there would be no suffering” is missing a key element of the argument often overlooked. For if there was no suffering in the world, that would provide a strong case for the atheism; for the God of the Bible promises suffering. Therefore, what the assertion has ignored is that the Bible describes a world where both God and suffering co-exist. The assertion would only be valid if the Bible portrayed a world where the existence of God had precluded the existence of suffering. Yet, as is patently obvious, the Bible is saturated with accounts of suffering. The space between the first and last two chapters of Scripture contains little respite from the presence of human suffering.

Therefore, the argument must be moved back another step. Though Scripture might be accurate in its portrayal of a world where suffering exists, while maintaining the existence of God it the midst, the concept of God (as described in the Bible) is presented as being incompatible with the presence of suffering. The two are seen as paradoxical.

While there are a number of answers that can and should be presented from the Biblical data, there is one angle that I believe is very important, and largely unexplored to my knowledge. It is the angle of the culture that asks the question. Tim Keller provides some very interesting material on unpacking worldviews when responding to objections in ‘The Reason For God’. While we might believe that the objection to God from suffering is universally valid, we should be aware of the extent to which our worldview is in play. For the assertion that suffering disproves the existence of God, is largely asked by those living in the affluent west. Western society has made great strides to minimalize the amount of suffering we encounter. Medicine and our understanding of healthcare have advanced. We understand diet. Food is readily available. Education is commonplace and offered to all. Governments put policies in place to provide finance for those unable to work. Houses are sturdily built. Famines are non-existent. Wars happen on the other side of the world. We are well clothed and provided for. Not to mention, I am not likely to witness anything that would classify as a serious flood, hurricane, tornado, tidal wave, volcano or earthquake. We have done our best to eradicate suffering. Of course, we will all witness disease and death during our lifetimes. Perhaps poverty, homelessness, mental illness and loneliness. And many of us will at least indirectly witness the horrors of the world. But you understand the point. It would not be unusual to live 80 years, be financially secure, well fed, have family and friends, all without witnessing much beyond the garden variety struggles of human experience. 

For us, suffering is not normal. It is to be avoided, not expected. When we encounter it, something must be wrong with the world. Our entire existence is based around comfort and the absence of struggle. When you shape your worldview that way, you will also shape your God that way. If life is about comfort, then our idea of God will revolve around him desiring and maintaining our comfort. Therefore, the presence of suffering provides an objection to God. We match our idea of God to our expectations for life. “My expectations are that I live a healthy, wealthy life, therefore God’s desires must match mine. If God does not give me these things, he must not exist.” There is the potential for us to create a cushy and selfish idea of God. We end up with people converting to atheism because they caught a cold that forced them to miss their theatre trip. I realize that this isn’t true of everyone, and many affluent people can still experience horrors that genuinely question their belief in God. Though I still believe that the general observation is valid. 

Is it not interesting that these objections are pushed in societies that suffer the least? For when we examine the growth of Christianity, we notice how much of the church’s growth is found in the midst of suffering and persecution. This was true of Jesus’ first disciples right through to the present day. If suffering provided a robust objection to God, then it is interesting to note the extent to which reality seems to defy theory.

Along similar lines, almost all of the Biblical characters suffered all kinds of atrocious experiences, yet not once does the Bible record them questioning the existence of God. Indeed, many questions are recorded (why do righteous people suffer? Is suffering a divine punishment? Does suffering reflect that the world is soon to end? Will God avenge the victims of suffering?) but the people involved never see suffering as incompatible with God.

Indeed, if the theory were true, what would we expect to see in reality? All theories of reality should be tested against the reality they seek to critique. If it were true that suffering provided a solid objection to God then we should expect to discover that religious adherence would correlate to suffering. That in areas where suffering is greater, belief in God is diminished. This is simply untrue. In fact a case could be made that belief in God geographically (and, to an extent, historically) increases with suffering.

If we, Christians included, have created a God whose primary mission is to relieve us of problems (like some divine handyman), then it is no surprise that we have given rise to the belief that suffering and God are incompatible. And it is frankly a little cheeky to suggest that the my subscription to theism depends upon God upholding my comfort, whilst the suffering masses of our world remain firm in their adherence to God.