I Peter 1:3-9 (Call to Worship) Luke 19:41-44; James 1:1-4
Talk about a guy down on his luck, experiencing a little pain and suffering as he’s lost in the desert . . . desperately needing a drink . . . of anything. He comes upon another man riding a camel. He asked the man if he had something to drink. The man on the camel said “No, but I have a nice selection of ties. Would you like to buy one?”
“Are you crazy? I need something to drink, not a tie!”
So the man on the camel rode on, and the walking man continued his slow and very thirsty trek for several days. Finally, he came upon a cantina. He gratefully approached the doorman and said, “I’m so glad I made it! Can I come in and get some water?”
The doorman frowned at him and said, “Not without a tie.”
As we attempt to come to grips with pain and suffering, we really have two main issues that boil to the surface:
- the cause of our pain and suffering, (which we have already talked about) and
- our response to it.
These two issues are often intertwined, in that folks tend to expend a lot of energy trying to pinpoint the cause before deciding how they are going to respond. And that’s why I spent some time last week dealing with causality.
But the real issue for Christians should not be . . . “Is God responsible?” but rather, “Now that this pain and suffering has occurred . . . how am I going to respond to it?”
So, how should we respond to this job loss, this divorce, this broken relationship, this illness, this death of a loved one? (more…)