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Last modified
Wednesday, April 7, 2004 9:24 PM PDT
Taken from NCTimes.com
A question that
lingers beyond Easter:
Why does
evil still rage?
By: RICHARD
OSTLING - Associated Press
A classic issue that has
consumed countless books of philosophy runs like so: If God is loving
and has absolute power, why is there such evil and suffering in this
life?
The days surrounding Easter add a special seasonal aspect to this
problem among Christians as they think about the impact of Jesus
Christ's death on the cross and his rising from the dead.
Some New Testament
verses teach that the powers of evil were defeated through Jesus'
crucifixion and resurrection. But as Richard Hays of Duke University
Divinity School observes, that appears to contradict other New Testament
verses, "not to mention our own experience of evil in the world."
In triumphant
tones, the Apostle Paul writes that with the Crucifixion, God not only
forgave people's sins but "disarmed the principalities and powers and
made a public example of them, triumphing over them" (Colossians 2:15).
In the same letter, Paul says that God "has delivered us from the
dominion of darkness and transferred us to the kingdom of his beloved
Son in whom we have redemption" (1:13-14). Further, the risen Christ is
called "the head of all rule and authority" (2:10), suggesting complete
power over events.
Such verses troubled Mathias Eddie, a Solomon Islands reader who wrote
Christianity Today about this. Hays responded in the magazine's "Good
Question" column.
Hays explained that Paul's words are "a visionary statement that sees
God's final redemptive purpose as though it were already complete, since
the final outcome is guaranteed by the cross and resurrection."
"Why do the powers of wickedness continue to operate effectively in this
world? Because the story is not over," he said. "The climactic victory
has been won on the cross but there is still much residual resistance.
So we live in a tension-filled interval."
Theologians use the phrase "realized eschatology" for the idea that
Christ's triumph means the kingdom of God is fully present here and now.
But most Christians believe the kingdom was established only partially,
with the culmination coming at some unknown future point. The Lord's
Prayer phrase "thy kingdom come" implies this sense that complete
earthly fulfillment lies ahead.
To Hays, the Bible clearly teaches that earthly evil was not totally
eradicated. Paul speaks in Colossians about "my sufferings" (1:24) and
prays that fellow believers will be strengthened "for all endurance and
patience" (1;11). He also looks toward future culmination: "When Christ
who is our life appears, then you also will appear with him in glory"
(3:3-4).
Elsewhere, the Paul who depicted Christ's triumph over "powers" and
"darkness" addresses "the sufferings of this present time," the way that
"the whole creation has been groaning in travail together until now" and
the fact that individuals likewise "groan inwardly," awaiting full
redemption (in Romans 8:18-23).
In fact, belief in evil's existence is a hallmark of orthodox
Christianity, Hays wrote, in contrast with, say, the Christian Science
religion, which denies the reality of evil, or certain ancient Gnostics
and modern groups that think the spiritually pure are somehow removed
from the material world and its evils.
Another facet of the mystery was addressed by John Timmer, a Christian
Reformed Church minister in Grand Rapids, Mich., in his intriguing
little book "God of Weakness" (CRC Publications).
God himself is not weak, Timmer wrote, but he exercises his infinite
power in ways that defy human expectations, working through weak earthly
partners. Biblical Israel, a small and sometimes erring nation, and the
fallible Christian church are examples. Due to the universality of sin,
so is each individual.
Still, the question lingers why God does not impose immediate perfection
and rescue all oppressed and suffering people. Timmer says that
"Christianity has no answer for deep pain," nor will anyone have the
answer in this life. "All it has is a reply, a concrete way of dealing
with it."
The latest of many devotional books on coping with the problem of pain
is "Why?" (W Publishing) by Anne Graham Lotz, the Rev. Billy Graham's
daughter.
On the Net:
Christianity Today:
http://www.christianitytoday.com |