Jac's point, I think, (alhtough please correct me if I am wrong), is that a correct view of Humans as depraved and sinful means that all are guilty and deserving of God's wrath. As painful as that is, until we really understand how utterly we have fallen, we will NEVER understand His grace. If we don't really see the nature of humans as against God, then we will see Him as unjust.catherine wrote:Thanks for all your thoughts on this.
Jac, you said: '' Until you come to recognize that human beings absolutely and totally deserve every moment of torture in an eternal hell, you will always have a problem with the justice of God, for you see yourself (and other supposedly "innocent" people) as not REALLY being THAT bad.'' I completely and utterly reject and abhor this statement of yours. It repulses me and fortunately after studying this in great length I am convinced you are utterly wrong. You are asking us to suspend our common sense and the usual measuring sticks we use in this life, regarding these massacres, and just accept cos we don't know ? If God is anything like Jesus, then if there is a good reason, He won't be biting my head off for wondering about it.
The unfortunate fact of this our existence is that humans will always face the curse until CHrist's return and we are under a new creation. Now that doesn't mean that we cannot struggle through questions. (Why is there cancer, why did God deliver someone from one disease and another doe from the same disease...why do babies die and suffer) However, I think we will not really be satisfied in any answer but that knowing that GOd is incontrol and that He is just. Do you not think that God weeps for the suffering? Even in His justice and wrath? Does a father not hurt when punishment is meted out to his children? I think many have the picture of a gleeful God, sadistic, facetious, and flippant.
Do you really think that there is a big difference between God *allowing*?catherine wrote: Once I know the reason I may feel real bad that I doubted Him, but from this perspective, here in the 21st century, I can't see an explanantion - and in Job's case, the evil being done to him was via Satan, not God. God allowed Satan to test Job. God allows evil up to today. This is hard to accept, but I understand everything has to run it's course to the sorry end.
I think there is a difference between an honest struggle with what happens in life, the Psalmist stated it over and over....essentially "God, I look around me and I see the innocent dying and suffering and the wicked flourishing and complainging that this isn't just but I know that you are ultimately the one who will see this through" versus "God, how could you do this, you are wrong".
I don't think we are mean to be pollyanna about our faith, always smiling and whistling about how everything is great. THere is a time to really mourn for the death that still occurs.
There is a great line form a Michael Card song written as if from Go'd's thoughts..."I will heal the wounds I make, and carefully take them back to me"