Throughout this whole episode Turk defends the idea of Christmas and celebration and getting in the spirit. Then, after a particularly hard Christmas Eve of being on call he begins to lose his hope and his faith. Watch the clip…
I love Turk’s honesty. I don’t I have ever met a single person, follower of Jesus or not, who doesn’t at some point ask the questions that Turk asks, that feels the despair that Turk feels, that feels the pointlessness that Turk feels. You can hear it echoing in his words, “How am I supposed to believe in something that is willing to let innocent people suffer?”
I don’t care if you have been a Christian from birth, or you refuse to believe in God, this question always comes into play. For a lot of my atheist friends, this is why they refuse to believe in God, any god for that matter. And at some point, every follower of Jesus Christ wrestles with this question.
The answer?
I don’t know.
Let’s be honest, if I knew, I would write a book, travel around talking about it and would have made a lot of money. But alas.
I think there are a lot of answers to how are we supposed to maintain faith when innocent people are suffering but the truth is, they don’t really help.
Fortunately for us the Bible abounds with stories of innocent suffering. The best story, from start to finish is the story of Job. A blameless man whose life God allows Satan to systematically destroy. First his home and all he possesses, then Job loses his family, then his physical health. There is no rhyme or reason for it, but Job maintains his worship, his trust, and of his faith in God. It really is a remarkable story that if you haven’t read, ever or even recently, please read it now, thank me later.
We live in a broken, hurting world with broken, hurting people and sometimes those people make choices that affect the innocent. And its extremely hard to reconcile that fact when we are the innocent or know or have to watch others suffer.
No one denies that it is hard. No one denies that it is easy to just ignore and move on. And it should cause us to pause. To think. It should cause us to cry out to God. But that doesn’t mean we throw away all that we know of who God is because of hard times. And it’s in that moment that our faith becomes so important.
Scripture defines faith in this way in Hebrews 11:
Faith is the confidence that what we hope for will actually happen; it gives us assurance about things we cannot see.
Assurance about things we cannot see. I have to have hope that there are things we will understand when I stand before God. But if not, I place everything I know of myself in the hands of everything I know of God. And my faith will find its assurance in Him.