There have been countless attempts to try and answer the question, “Why do bad thing happen to good people?”
There have been countless attempts to try and answer the
question, “Why do bad thing happen to good people?” Every philosopher and theologian from
Confucius to Harold Kushner has taken a stab at it. But to the best of my knowledge, no answer
has ever proved completely satisfying.
Still, I believe that there are at least two affirmations
that we, as Christians, can make in response to this age-old question. The first is that the God we worship and
serve is a God who knows firsthand what it is to suffer. The gods of other religions seem content to
remain aloof and unacquainted with the human experience, but not our God. Over and over again, God has come to
us—hearing our cries, being moved by our circumstances—and finally, “in the
fullness of time” (as the Apostle Paul put it), God showed up in person. The Word became flesh.
But think about that for a moment. Flesh gets bruised, flesh gets scarred, and
flesh bleeds! Indeed, in the Apostles’
Creed, the only verb used to describe Jesus’ life here on earth is the word
“suffer.” Between being “born of the
Virgin Mary” and being “crucified, dead, and buried,” there is just one
phrase—“suffered under Pontius Pilate.”
Obviously, this does not answer the question of why bad
things happen to good people. But it
does allow us to say that ours is a God who understands what we are going
through, and who is willing to enter into our suffering, so that we do not have
to suffer alone.
The second affirmation that we can make is that God is able
to take anything—even things that are evil and outside of God’s will—and
transform them. Put another way, I do
not believe that it is ever God’s intent that bad things happen to good
people. But neither do I believe that,
just because they happen, God is suddenly cut out of the equation. The reason we call the day of Jesus’
crucifixion “Good” is not because of what took place on Friday, but because of
what took place on Easter Sunday! The
cross itself—an instrument of hatred, cruelty, and death—was gathered up by God
and transformed into an instrument of salvation.
To be honest, I am not sure if we will ever fully answer the question of why bad things happen to good
people. But that doesn’t mean we need to
fall silent when faced with the question.
We can still affirm God’s presence and power.
We may not have a map, but we do have an anchor. And as any sailor will tell you—in the middle
of a storm, having an anchor is far more important!