Skip to main content

Why?

There are some who are living outside a relationship with Jesus Christ that would look into the life of a Christian and ask, "Why would God allow suffering in your life?" Sometimes the assumption is made that if "your God" is really who you say he is, he wouldn't allow anything negative to happen in your life. 
If you are a follower of Jesus Christ, you know that the reality of life in Christ is much different.  God never promises smooth sailing.  In fact, we know from scripture that the path of obedience to Christ is a challenging path to travel, but one that we can do because of the strength that God gives us through our obedience to Jesus.
In the opening sentences of Paul's second letter to the Corinthians, he talks about the comfort that God gives us.  Paul says that "God is our merciful Father and the source of all comfort." Paul goes on to say that God comforts us "so that we can comfort others. When they are troubled, we will be able to give them the same comfort God has given us" (2 Corinthians 1:3-4, NLT).
In these few sentences, we find a great truth wrapped up for us to embrace. God does provide us with comfort. It is through his incredible mercy and love for us that we are the grateful recipients of his comfort. Notice that it doesn't say we are the recipients of a worry free life; rather, in the midst of the trials that life will surely bring, we are comforted by our Father God.
God provides us with comfort because he loves us, but also because he is equipping us to do the same for the world around us. As a follower of Jesus Christ, we are tasked with bringing comfort to a world that has no comfort.  We are tasked with bringing love to a world that has no love.  This is why God does for us, so that we can do for others.
Next time you are asking yourself, "Why am I dealing with this?", lean deep into the arms of Jesus and rest in his comfort and know that God is preparing you to do the same for someone else soon. 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Rock 'Em Sock 'Em

 I did not grow up throwing punches with schoolmates or with siblings. I did not experience violence in my home as a child. I was never encouraged to throw the first punch, or any punch for that matter. My memories of physical altercations with another person are limited to one specific instance from my junior high years, and the result of my choosing to resort to throwing a punch was not entirely positive. Yes, I did "solve" my problem on one hand, but I created new problems on the other.  There is certainly a culture that exists in our world that promotes violence as the answer to solving problems. I have a 5 and 7 year old - believe me, some people think that hitting is the only way to fix something. But outside of child's play and sibling bickering, there is a much more damaging culture that promotes "fixing" whatever problem one might have by exerting physical prowess or at least the threat of exertion. It is not limited to one section of culture or even so...

The Captivity of Fear

Fear holds you captive. By this, I mean that when we are afraid, it holds us in a restricted position. What we could have possibly done, we can do no longer, or at least not to the original potential. My wife sometimes shares a story of fear that she has related to the abnormally large cockroaches that we would sometimes encounter when we lived in Hawaii. Truthfully, they were water bugs, but their similarity to a cockroach was remarkable, especially in a dimly lit situation. On one occasion, a water bug had taken up residence in a door frame that she needed to pass through, but the mere fact that it was in that door frame was nearly enough to keep her from going through. She eventually mustered up the gumption and ran through the door. Her fear nearly kept her from doing what she needed to do, even though that particular task was not necessarily a noble one. In comparison, the prophet Jeremiah was given a task by God to warn Israel of the coming judgment of God. The judgment was roote...

One Heart

I have the privilege of being a part of a wonderful team of pastors and leaders from the MVNU Region who are doing the hard work of preparing for the '24-'27 PALCON cycle. PALCON is the Preachers and Leaders Conference, hosted regionally at different educational institutions around the United States on a three-year cycle. As we begin this next cycle in June of 2024, MVNU will be the first host site for PALCON.  Wednesday evening and Thursday of this past week, I spent time with pastors and leaders who are, for the most part, in the trenches and around the tables, leading in local and district ministry for the Church of the Nazarene. Here are my takeaways from this time together. Pastors are tired. They were tired before 2020, but COVID and the sundry of challenges that it brought have certainly made an impact in many ministries (not all). This sense of tired has been heightened by a significant number of church members and attendees either falling away completely or shifting to...