From Monergism.com
Background Reading:
Romans 8:26-39; Genesis 50:15-21
In 1858, a gifted young Presbyterian missionary named John G. Paton sailed
with his wife and infant son to the New Hebrides in the South Pacific to begin
missionary work among the islanders. Within a few months of arrival, both his
infant son and his wife had died, leaving him to labor alone.
In August 1876, a gifted young theologian names Benjamin Breckinridge
Warfield and his bride were honeymooning in Germany. While sightseeing in the
Black Forest region, they were suddenly caught in a severe storm, and something
that was never quite explained happened to his bride, rendering her an invalid
for the rest of their lives together.
In the 1950s the Independent Presbyterian Church of Savannah congregation
called a young preacher to take the reigns of a very divided church. He came
with his wife and their five children, the youngest only three years old. Within
a year and a half, Anton Van Puffelen developed a brain tumor, and in just over
two years after he started his work in Savannah the Rev. Van Puffelen was dead.
How do you explain these things? Perhaps just as baffling, how do you explain
the responses of these individuals? John G. Patton stayed on the field and
reaped a great harvest, later saying:
I built the grave round and round with coral blocks, and covered the top with
beautiful white coral, broken small gravel; and that spot became my sacred and
much frequented shrine, during all the following months and years when I labored
on for the salvation of these savage Islanders amidst difficulties, dangers and
deaths. Whensoever Tanna turns to the Lord, and is won for Christ, man in
after-days will find the memory of that spot still green – where with ceaseless
prayers and tears I claimed that the land for God in which I hand ‘buried my
dead’ with faith and hope.
Warfield cared for his wife the remaining forty years of their adult life
together, humbly, submissively, without complaint, without self-pity, without
justifying a need for his own fulfillment, fulfilling his marital vows, doing
his duty toward his wife.
‘Mrs. Van,’ as she was known in Savannah, gentle and meek on the surface,
touch as nails underneath, began to teach in the Independent Presbyterian Day
School and reared her five children at tremendous self-sacrifice, again without
complaint.
What was the key in each of these situations? The key is that each believed
in the sovereignty of God. Each understood God’s justice, His mercy, His
absolute rule, and each received their circumstances as from his hand for their
good and submitted to it.
Still, how do you explain adversity? How do you deal with the suffering that
is in the world? Granted that it takes time for our emotions to catch up with
our minds, that there are no ‘easy’ answers, and that when we answer the ‘why’
question we must do so not simplistically or matter of factly; yet we do have an
explanation for suffering that works and makes room for comfort in the world of
pain.
The Problem of Pleasure
From our point of view, much of the discussion of the ‘problem of pain’ and
suffering gets started on the wrong foot. As we saw in our consideration of
predestination, there is a tendency to begin with the assumption of human
innocence. Adversity then is viewed as an unfair or unjust intrusion into the
life of one who is undeserving. This is implicit in almost all of the popular
discussions of the subject. Thus we regularly question, ‘Why would God have
allowed this to happen to such a fine (and undeserving) family?’
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