©1994 RBC Ministries--Grand Rapids, MI 49555 Printed in USA
Our answer to this question will tell us a lot about our ability to trust God. It will show how ready we are to answer the objection of skeptics that the kind of all-powerful, good God described in the Bible is a logical impossibility. Such people argue that the amount of pain and suffering in the world proves that if God is good He's not all-powerful, and that if He's all-powerful He isn't good. While the argument sounds philosophical, it's as real as the pain and fear that touches each of our lives and families. Herb Vander Lugt, RBC senior research editor, understands some of these questions. In addition to more than 50 years of pastoral experience, he and his wife Ginny have raised a dearly loved daughter who was brain injured at birth. I pray that you will find his conclusions, as reflected in the following pages, both comforting and challenging. Martin R. De Haan II, president of RBC Ministries.
A man who grew up in North Africa as the son of missionary parents tells of the time he saw a pregnant woman killed when a team of horses pulling a buggy galloped through a crowd of people. The driver stopped, saw that the woman was dead, shrugged his shoulders, and said, "It was the will of Allah," and continued on his way. A 39-year-old woman has lost her desire to live because her husband left her for a younger lover. She has been a devout believer and wonders why God is doing this to her. The grandfather of a teenage girl killed by a drunk driver has stopped going to church and becomes angry when Indeed, sometimes it's hard to reconcile belief in God's goodness and power with what we see. I remember the thoughts and feelings I had as a young man when I visited a hospital's pediatric ward. I was a surgical technician during World War II, so I had seen severely wounded men. But the sight of deformed and dying children was almost too much for me. I couldn't think of any reason for what I saw. They had done nothing to bring these conditions on themselves. They couldn't learn anything through their pain. I found myself wondering about God, even doubting some of the beliefs I had cherished for most of my lifetime. People who experience or observe debilitating disease or heartbreaking circumstances have a number of options. They can deny the existence of a personal God and struggle with unexplainable issues of origin and meaning. They can accept the existence of a God who is a mixture of good and evil. Or they can conclude that God is good, but that some things are beyond His control--the conclusion expressed by Rabbi Kushner in his book When Bad Things Happen To Good People.
The Bible does give us another choice, however. It presents God as both all-powerful and good. The God of the Bible is pleased with those who do good, and slowly but surely becomes angry with those who stubbornly resist Him (Ps. 7:11; Nah. 1:1-7). He feels grief toward those who reject Him (Gen. 6:6; Ps. 95:10). He hurts when He finds it necessary to correct and punish (Isa. 63:9). He finds no pleasure in judging the wicked, and longs for their change of heart (Ezek. 18:23,32; 33:11). He delights in kindness, justice, and righteousness (Jer. 9:24). And He loved the world so much that in the person of Jesus Christ He became a member of the human family and took our punishment by dying like a sinner (Jn. 3:16; 2 Cor. 5:21). People who have placed their trust in Jesus Christ and live in obedience to God's Word experience the reality of His love, and love Him in return. They can go through overwhelming sorrows, distressing
physical afflictions, and dire circumstances with amazing resiliency. The heartbroken father of a 20-year-old girl who died because the heater in the motel was not vented said to me, "I'm not angry with God. How can I doubt the goodness of the One who has shown so
much love toward me and been so patient with me through all my years?" I talked with The fact remains, however, that the world is full of grief, pain, sorrow, cruelty, and injustice. And while some believers are able to triumph over it, many are deeply shaken. They often wonder where God is or why He lets them down. I have tried to help many such people and have suffered with them. I am therefore writing this booklet from my heart as well as my mind. I want to draw on the Bible and human experience to provide an understandable and practical answer to the question, "How Much Does God Control?" I will do so under the headings: (1) paradoxical truths, (2) conflicting kingdoms, (3) perplexing problems, and (4) practical implications. I pray that the thoughts expressed in the following pages will be used by God to strengthen His people and lead doubters to faith in the One who has faced the problem of evil for us.
GOD'S SOVEREIGNTY. God is active in history, even when He doesn't seem to be. This theme runs through the whole Bible. The Old Testament story of Joseph is a striking example. Joseph was indulged by his father, hated and abused by his brothers, falsely accused of sexually assaulting his employer's wife, and forgotten in prison. Yet through those dark years, God was quietly moving Joseph into a position to save the founding fathers of Israel from starvation. God gave Joseph the ability to interpret dreams, which put him in favor with the king of Egypt. And because of his God-given administrative ability, Joseph soon became the prime minister of Egypt. In this role, he was able to protect the nation of Egypt as well as his own family from famine. More than 30 years after being the victim of his brothers' hatred, Joseph quieted their fear of retaliation by saying:
God prospered the descendants of Jacob in Egypt. They multiplied and became a nation of about 2.5 million people. He then allowed their circumstances to change when a new dynasty came into power. He
brought Moses into the world, kept him alive, God's part in what happens is not always detectable. His actions are often so interwoven with earthly and human factors that we do not know exactly what we can attribute directly to Him. We know that as a holy God who hates sin He never leads anyone to do evil. James declared as an absolute principle that "God cannot be tempted by evil, nor does He Himself tempt anyone" (1:13). Yet He works in and through human sin to accomplish His purposes. He told the Israelites that if they disobeyed Him He would bring a nation against them and that the invaders would be unspeakably cruel (Dt. 28:49-52). The Bible writers repeatedly tell us that God sent the Assyrians and Babylonians against the Israelites. Moses also told the Israelites that God would bring them terrible plagues and sicknesses (vv.58-62). A number of earthly and human factors were involved in the fulfillment of these threats. The leaders of the nations that attacked the Israelites freely chose to do it. The foreign invaders freely chose to be cruel and insensitive. Perhaps some of the famines and plagues could be explained as natural events, but the Bible doesn't make these distinctions. God said they would take place in judgment, and He saw to it that they did. Maybe Satan and the kingdom of evil is so malignant that they quickly bring about pestilence and plagues as soon as God removes His restraining hand. Satan was eager to afflict Job and did so with vengeance as soon as God gave him permission. Job, not knowing the full story, attributed his suffering to God. Ultimately, of course, it had God's approval. He could have prevented it if He had chosen to do so. Perhaps the relationship between Judas Iscariot and Jesus throws some light on the relationship between God and the evil ones He uses to carry out His plans. Knowing what Judas intended to do, Jesus hid this fact from His other disciples, told Judas to do quickly what he intended to do, and then went to the Garden where the betrayer could sell out for 30 pieces of silver.
We can be certain that nothing can happen to us without passing through God's permissive will, and that He can bring about good through it (Rom. 8:28). With that assurance, we can live trustingly and hopefully, no matter what our circumstances. When doubts come, we can, like Job, talk to God about them with candor and honesty. As we grow to know Him better, we will see more and more clearly how great and good He is. We will also see how small and sinful we are. Finally, we will end all our complaining and say with Job, "I have heard of You by the hearing of the ear, but now my eye sees You. Therefore, I abhor myself, and repent in dust and ashes" (42:5-6). God is sovereign. He is completely in control at all times. And those who know Him look forward to the day when they will join all the inhabitants of the universe to sing, "Blessing and honor and glory and power be to Him who sits on the throne, and to the Lamb, forever and ever!" (Rev. 5:13). HUMAN FREEDOM.
Our uniqueness can be seen clearly when we consider our ability to respond to our Lord's summary of the Law and Prophets: to love God above all and to love our neighbor as ourselves (Mt. 22:37-40). As human beings we can first of all understand what these commands mean. We can evaluate their implications for our daily lives. We do not need much education or intelligence to do this. Second, as human beings we can choose whether or not we will take these commands seriously. If we make the right choice and find that we cannot do so perfectly, we can choose to seek God's forgiveness and enablement. Third, we can, with God's help, place the interests of others above our own. People sometimes go to great lengths and personal sacrifice to help those for whom they have no natural affection. Some have even given their lives for enemies. This is not true of the animal world, which has not been made in the likeness of God. Since human beings are able to understand God's commands, we can choose whether or not to take them seriously. And since we have been given the ability to deliberately place the desires of others before
our own, we are responsible when we do things that are ungodly, cruel, immoral, and selfish. Therefore, we have no right to blame God for our sins. Nor can we blame Him when someone wrongs us or perpetrates a terrible crime. Even though God is not surprised by our misuse of freedom, He enters emotionally into our failure. When He confronted Adam and Eve after they had sinned, He reflected disappointment as He called out to them, "Where are you?" (Gen. 3:9). Later He pled with Cain to resist his evil desire to kill Abel (4:6-7), but it was to no avail. A few chapters later, God observed that people had become so terribly wicked that He was "sorry that He had made man on the earth, and He was grieved in His heart" (6:6). We ask, "God was sorry? Didn't He know what would happen?" But Moses felt no need to explain. A few thousand years later, about 1500 BC, God was repeatedly grieved and disappointed by the Israelites, a nation of people He had miraculously delivered out of slavery in Egypt. He had great plans for this nation. He told them He wanted to make them a "special treasure," "a kingdom of priests and a holy nation" (Ex. 19:5-6). He promised them that if they would obey Him they would be "blessed above all peoples," and said He would "take away from [them] all sickness" (Dt. 7:12-16). Through the Israelites, God desired to make Himself known to the surrounding pagan nations. But they would not comply with the terms of obedience that would have made them "a light to the Gentiles" (Acts 13:47). How did God feel when His people disobeyed Him and brought all kinds of trouble on themselves? He was angry (Ps. 95:8-11). He suffered with them and felt sorrow: "In all their affliction He was afflicted . . . . But they rebelled and grieved His Holy Spirit" (Isa. 63:9-10). He felt like a loving husband does when his wife becomes unfaithful and refuses to change her ways until he has no choice but to divorce her: "How can I give you up, Ephraim? How can I hand you over, Israel? . . . My heart churns within Me" (Hos. 11:8). He felt like a kind father does when his children are disrespectful and ungrateful: "A son honors his father . . . . If then I am the Father, where is My honor?" (Mal. 1:6). The New Testament also portrayed God as disappointed, grieved, and frustrated. Jesus "came to His own, and His own did not receive Him" (Jn. 1:11). He repeatedly announced to the Israelites that He was the Messiah promised in the Old Testament. He performed miracles as evidence of the truthfulness of His claims, but He was hated, maligned, rejected, and finally crucified as a blasphemer. Matthew showed us how much this disappointed Jesus Christ, and how grieved He was as He contemplated the judgment that would fall on the generation that rejected Him:
Luke portrayed Jesus approaching the city near the close of His earthly ministry, weeping over it, and saying:
Remember, when you see and hear Jesus in the Gospels you are looking at and listening to God. He said, "He who has seen Me has seen the Father" (Jn. 14:9). Think of what this means! Are you heartsick and distressed by the wickedness, injustice, pain, and sorrow around you? So is God! Are you heartbroken because you are being wronged? Do you wonder why God is allowing this grief? If so, be assured that an evil person or evil people are doing this to you. God isn't leading them to do these wrongs. He hates to see you wronged. He feels your grief. He holds the person or people wronging you responsible for what they are doing. And He is able to bring eternal good for you out of this bad experience (Ps. 42). Therefore, quit blaming God. Pray to Him. Trust Him. Take whatever appropriate action is open to you. Then wait for God to prove Himself faithful. As Sometimes God doesn't intervene as we might wish He would. He lets wicked people prosper while allowing godly men and women to suffer. A poet in Israel had this problem, and expressed it in the opening verses of Psalm 73. But he changed his attitude after going to the temple to worship God. There he saw life from the perspective of eternity. Thinking of the prospering wicked, he understood their end. He saw them "in slippery places," confessed his shortsightedness, and affirmed his confidence in God's goodness and power. "You will guide me with Your counsel, and afterward receive me to glory" (v.24). The prophet Habakkuk was also troubled by God's failure to punish the wicked in Israel. He called the Lord's attention to their wickedness. God told His servant that judgment was coming. The Babylonian armies would soon invade the land. This puzzled the prophet. Why help the Babylonians, a wicked and cruel people more godless and cruel than the Israelites? God then assured the prophet that He would also punish them in His own time. The prophet finally felt so confident about God's goodness and power that he closed his book with a hymn of praise and trust (Hab. 3:17-19). The prophet Ezekiel, who was among the exiles after Babylon defeated the kingdom of Judah, was God's mouthpiece to tell the Lord's people that though they had "defiled" the land with their sin and "profaned" God's name wherever they went, they would one day repent, be cleansed, receive a new heart, and fulfill their destiny (Ezek. 36:16-38). He assured them that God is completely in charge. When God came to earth in the person of Jesus Christ and presented Himself as Israel's promised Messiah, He was rejected and crucified. But God was not dismayed. He, of course, had known this would happen. He made Christ's crucifixion and resurrection the means of salvation and eternal glory for all who would believe. A little more than 7 weeks after our Lord's death and resurrection the apostle Peter summed up this amazing truth:
The classic picture of God's sovereignty over man's rebellion is found in Psalm 2. It opens with a confederacy of nations in rebellion against God. They rage against Him and declare that they will break loose from His chains. But the Supreme Ruler does not feel threatened. He laughs in derision at the puny little kings. His laughter quickly turns to anger as He tells these rebels that He has already installed His Son as King. Then, warning these earthly rulers against continued rebellion, He urges them to serve Him with fear and surrender to His Son. Human beings are free to oppose or to accept God. But God is completely in control. Nothing can happen unless He permits it. And in the end He will abolish all evil, right every wrong, and give those who trust Him an eternity of unmixed joy. That's comforting!
Since Satan has authority over a vast realm, he heads a kingdom of evil that battles the kingdom of God. The evidence that these two kingdoms are in conflict is all around us--to some extent in nature, but far more pervasively in the moral and spiritual attitudes and actions of mankind. The people who have chosen the kingdom of darkness reflect the spirit of their leader, the devil. Jesus said of him, "He was a murderer from the beginning . . . . When he speaks a lie, he speaks from his own resources, for he is a liar and the father of it" (Jn. 8:44). Those who choose God as their King reflect the spirit of their Leader--the One who is the Author of life, the One in whom "we live and move and have our being" (Acts 17:28), and the One "who cannot lie" (Ti. 1:2). The fact that the kingdom of darkness wields great power accounts for a large share of the sin and suffering that mars our planet. THE KINGDOM OF GOD.
Isaiah declared that the king of Assyria was God's "rod," "staff," "ax," and "saw" to punish the citizens of the two tribes for their disobedience and rebellion (Isa. 10:5-15). The king did so by free and self-centered choice, not with any desire to fulfill God's will. Jeremiah It's also useless to argue about the chronological order of God's foreknowledge and determined will. Theologians have debated this matter but haven't settled the issue. Since God sees everything--past, present, and future--with equal clarity, we finite, time-bound creatures are not capable of placing a chronological order to God's ways. Whether God exercises control through natural means or through His supernatural power is not always evident to us. But that doesn't matter. Either way, "His kingdom rules over all" (Ps. 103:19). The phrase "kingdom of God" sometimes denotes a spiritual realm that exists now. We enter this "rule of God" when we believe on Jesus Christ. Paul declared that believers have been delivered "from the
power of darkness and conveyed . . . into the kingdom of the Son of His love" (Col. 1:13). Jesus enunciated the principles of this kingdom in His Sermon on the Mount recorded in Matthew 5-7 and Luke 6:20-49. Paul said that the kingdom of God is The "kingdom of God" can also refer to a physical realm that lies in the future. Someday (maybe soon) Jesus Christ is going to return to earth to establish His kingdom of universal justice, righteousness, and peace. The Old Testament prophets often spoke of this coming time. It will be a time of spiritual blessing (Isa. 32:1-2; Jer. 23:6; Ezek. 36:26-38). It will be a time during which perfect justice will be administrated (Isa. 2:1-4; 32:5; Mal. 3:18). Warfare will be abolished (Isa. 9:6-7; Hos. 2:18; Mic. 4:3). Social justice will prevail (Isa. 65:21-22; Amos 9:11,14). The climate will cause waste places to bloom and flourish (Isa. 35:1-2). Diseases and physical handicaps will be taken away (Isa. 35:5-6). The fact that people who now voluntarily enter God's kingdom are to be marked by love, purity, kindness, and a forgiving spirit tells us what God is like. The fact that His coming kingdom will be free from injustice, war, natural disaster, and disease shows us the conditions that delight God. War, disease, injustice, natural disaster, and other evils are therefore present with us only because sin invaded the good world He created. THE KINGDOM OF EVIL.
The Bible doesn't tell us when Satan became God's enemy. In fact, it doesn't describe his fall from sinlessness. It only alludes to it in Isaiah 14:12-15 and Ezekiel 28:12-19, passages that refer directly
to the king Satan afflicted Job (Job 1-2). He moved David to become proud and to number the citizens of his nation (1 Chr. 21:1). An evil spirit, a member of Satan's army, became a "lying spirit" in the mouth of Ahab's prophets to persuade him to fight a battle in which he would be killed (1 Ki. 22:13-28). Powerful evil spirits empower and guide leaders of nations (Dan. 10:13). Evil spirits possessed people at the time of Christ and perhaps still do (Mt. 8:16-17,28-34). Satan was involved with Paul's "thorn in the flesh" (2 Cor. 12:7). The devil and demons exercise real power through human agents who engage in idolatry and sorcery (1 Cor. 10:20). They empower false teachers (2 Cor. 11:13-14). They are able to work lying wonders (2 Th. 2:9; Rev. 18:23). This kingdom of evil is pervasive and powerful. Satan and his agents are undoubtedly responsible for much of the evil in the world. They are malignant and hateful. They are undoubtedly involved in the wars, injustices, persecutions, plagues, and other forms of evil that mar our world. Yet they can do only what God permits. Therefore, the Bible writers sometimes ascribed to God the evils that came about through the agency of evil spirits. We see this when we compare 1 Chronicles 21:1 with 2 Samuel 24:1. We also find that Job saw his afflictions as coming from the Lord. But God never said, "Don't blame Me, the devil did it." Ultimately God did permit it. It's still important, however, to observe the fact that much of the evil in our world comes from the devil and his agents. It enables us to maintain the doctrine that God is absolutely sinless and that He never instigates moral or spiritual evil. God's permission is not the same as His causation. Paul declared that God abandoned rebellious sinners to foolishness (Rom. 1:22), sensualism (vv.24-25), homosexual perversions (vv.26-27), a debased mind (vv.28-29), and total heartlessness (vv.30-32). God didn't cause these sinners to go ever deeper and deeper into degradation. He permitted them. Is it not possible that as God observes human beings going deeper into sin and rebellion that He gives the devil and his angels permission to bring about natural disasters, destructive crimes, and wars, persecutions, false religions, and plagues?
C. S. Lewis has given good reasons for his contention that wars, crimes, and injustices--evils that come about through bad choices made by cruel and lawless people--account for at least 80 percent of mankind's suffering. Many believe he was too conservative in his estimate. Furthermore, the Bible shows us that sometimes wars, famines, and diseases are brought on by God as punishment for deliberate sin and unbelief. However, some tough questions remain to be answered.
Why does God allow evil? The human race is what it is today because the people who once "knew God" turned away from Him and began to worship idols and commit immoral deeds (Rom. 1:21-23). God then "gave them up to uncleanness" (v.24), "vile passions" (v.26), and a "debased mind" (v.28). But even while God abandoned them to their evil ways, He gave them a knowledge of "the righteous judgment of God." But they continued in their wickedness and encouraged others to join them (v.32).
Why does God allow disaster and disease? We must admit that sometimes we can see no reason or purpose in some of the suffering we encounter. But that doesn't mean there is no divine reason or purpose. We Then too, these disturbing realities are a call to repentance. They remind us that this life is only a tiny segment of the whole picture. Jesus pointed out that the 18 people who were killed when a tower fell on them were not singled out for this accident because they were worse than average sinners. But He went on to say, "Unless you repent you will all likewise perish" (Lk. 13:5). Whenever we encounter diseases, deformities, disasters, or accident victims, we are to remember that we are no better than they. This is therefore a call to repentance for all of us. Something else that can help us when we come face-to-face with these disturbing facts of life is the realization that (1) God did not necessarily cause these circumstances, and that (2) God suffers with the hurting. The world as we know it today is under the curse God pronounced at the dawn of human history (Gen. 3:17-19). Paul personified the non-human created world, animate and inanimate, as waiting eagerly for the day when Christ returns, because it will then be delivered from the frustration and pain it endures because of the presence of evil (Rom. 8:18-25). Sometime in the past, either in connection with the fall of Satan or Adam, God introduced or permitted an element of disorder to enter the world. An elementary student of geology knows that the crust of the earth is a vast graveyard of species that came into being but did not survive very long. Scientists usually refer to the cause for this as randomness because it appears that way to us. (But not to God.) Maybe this element of disorder is the immediate cause of much of this world's distress--natural disasters, accidents, birth deformities, and debilitating diseases. It's a fact that known genetic factors make it possible to predict that some families will have members with diabetes, heart disease, cancer, and other maladies. We may perhaps refer to a "naturalistic norm," meaning that God normally permits nature to have its way. He's running that kind of world. But as He allows this, He is personally involved in every situation. And He doesn't enjoy seeing people endure grief and pain. When Jesus was here as God incarnate, He showed us the heavenly Father's attitude toward diseases and handicaps. He treated them as enemies--healing the sick, giving sight to the blind, enabling the crippled to use their limbs. The apostle John told us that upon seeing the mourners weeping because of Lazarus' death, Jesus "was deeply moved in spirit and troubled" (Jn. 11:33 NIV). Many scholars point out that the Greek word translated "was troubled" often denotes anger. Alongside His sorrow (He was "deeply moved"), He felt a sense of indignation and anger. This feeling apparently swept over Him as He thought of all the pain and grief Satan and sin had brought into the world.
Moreover, let's be careful to avoid overstating the harsh, unpleasant, and painful in life. Most people, including those who live in dire poverty or endure daily pain or cope with severe handicaps, enjoy life enough to want to continue living. Laughter rings out from ghetto dwelling places. Smiles adorn the faces of Haitians who don't know whether or not they will eat tomorrow. Yes, there is a lot of suffering. But we suffer one-by-one, and we receive grace when we look to God. Yes, we sometimes sorrow deeply. But after a time, the pain diminishes and we can go on. Why does God permit human history to continue generation after generation even though most of mankind will die without faith in Christ and go to an eternal hell? The glory of heaven is so marvelous we cannot comprehend it. How good of God to be so patient! And just as we cannot conceive of heaven's glory, we cannot comprehend We would like to believe in universal salvation--that all people will eventually embrace Jesus Christ and accept God's only way of salvation--but the Bible does not allow us to take this view. We may even like to believe in annihilation for the lost after they are judged and punished, but this idea doesn't have biblical support either. Eternal existence, even in hell, is a tribute to human uniqueness. It magnifies the importance of our decisions in this world. Some scholars have speculated that even in hell the inhabitants would choose continued consciousness to extinction of being. Maybe so. Maybe not. We join Abraham in asking the rhetorical question, "Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?" (Gen. 18:25). And we can rest with the implied answer, "Yes, He will do right."
Life is difficult. At times it's hard to know what to believe. But God has not left us without light. Even in the darkness of natural disasters, devastating diseases, and heartbreaking injustices, God has placed within our hearts the knowledge of good and evil. Down deep, we sense our responsibility to choose to do right. In this awareness God now invites us to respond to the light He has given us and to follow through in a life of love, obedience, and trust. COMMIT YOURSELF TO THE LIGHT.
COMMIT YOURSELF TO LOVE.
This means pleasing God more than pleasing ourselves. It means going out of our way to be kind, giving, and forgiving in all our earthly relationships. It means that by gifts of money and by voluntary service we will do what we can to reach people with the gospel, to feed the hungry, to provide shelter for the homeless, to rescue the fallen. We can do much to alleviate the suffering all around us. It is a life of submission to the challenge of Jesus:
COMMIT YOURSELF TO OBEDIENCE. People who love and obey the Lord will be led to the joyous certainty: "If anyone loves Me, he will keep My word; and My Father will love him, and We will come to him and make Our home with him" (Jn. 14:23). COMMIT YOURSELF TO TRUST. In 2 Corinthians 11, Paul said that he suffered in the service of the Lord with repeated beatings, three shipwrecks, a stoning, hunger and cold, weariness and toil, and imprisonments. He then told of a "thorn in the flesh" and how he prayed three times for its removal, only to have God tell him the thorn would remain with him. But the Lord assured him, "My grace is sufficient for you, for My strength is made perfect in weakness" (2 Cor. 12:9). Paul was able to accept God's will joyfully:
The apostle Peter, writing to believers who were beginning to experience persecution, told them to expect and to accept bad treatment as Jesus did, without resentment or a desire to retaliate:
Both What did Paul do in the midst of all his suffering? We saw that he trusted God and found it true that he was the strongest spiritually when he was the weakest physically. In a dungeon awaiting execution he could write with confidence:
Let's commit ourselves to trust God. If we do, we will find His grace adequate to give us victory over the worst that life can throw our way. There are no easy answers. But we can commit ourselves to Christ and to a love-filled, obedient, and trusting way of life. And when we do, we can experience the truth of 1 John 5:4, "This is the victory
that has overcome the world--our faith." | ||||||