Why do bad things happen to good people?

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I recently completed an academic exercise, reflecting on the problem of evil. I found the assignment useful for my ministry, as I regularly confront questions about why God allows suffering and evil. The assignment is in response to Rabbi Harold Kushner’s best-selling book, When Bad Things Happen to Good People.

Rabbi Kushner identified two contrasting views of God when he wrote, “I can worship a God who hates suffering but cannot eliminate it more than I can worship a God who chooses to make children suffer and die.” The first is a God who hates suffering but does not necessarily have power to eliminate it (known as process theology). The other view of God is one where God is in control and allows suffering to take place (some strands of classical theism). While there are many theologians who adhere to one of these views, I reject both positions as biblically sound teaching and would like to offer you a different route than the contrasts that Kushner sets forth.

The problem of Kushner and others who subscribe to process theology render God powerless and perhaps useless. William Hasker writes,

To say, as process theism does, that God has no direct control over anything that happens in the world, is to leave oneself with a picture of God’s power and God’s activity that is severely truncated, as compared to the way God is viewed in traditional theology and indeed in the Bible itself. (The Openness of God, 140)

The Bible is full of snippets of God’s power to create, to bring healing and to even raise people from the dead.
Kushner and other process theists are reacting to classical theism. When Christians speak of the sovereignty of God, many adhere to a form of sovereignty known as “specific sovereignty.” Proponents of this view maintain that God “can unilaterally ensure that all and only that which he desires to come about in our world will in fact occur.” What specific sovereignty will do is rob us from the power of prayer or even hope. If God has already determined the order of events, then petitionary prayer is merely an “academic exercise.”

Kushner rejects this notion and subscribes to a view of God that resembles process theology. Process theists believe that “all entities always possess some power of self-determination… They deny that God can ever unilaterally intervene in any sense in earthly affairs.” (Pinnock, 158-159) They contend that prayer affects the petitioner more so than it affects God to change or respond to the particular situation. Since everyone or everything has some power of self-determination, within process theism we must hope that all these entities (including God) will cooperate to bring a favorable result. As Hasker writes, “The outcome depends entirely on the obedient, cooperative response of the creatures—and judging from the results so far, it is difficult to be extremely optimistic.” (Pinnock, 140)

God is sovereign and is in control and has power over evil. Such a conclusion does not require God to exercise “total control of everything everybody does.” It just means that all events—including evil, pain and suffering—are within God’s Kingdom. God expresses his power by interacting and confronting the evil that happens around us.

First, we must recognize God is on the side of humanity. Kushner asserts that God cannot eliminate evil because he wants to believe that God is on the side of those who are suffering. The alternative, according to Kushner, seems to be that God is not on the side of those who are suffering, but rather he either causes or chooses to not intervene to halt evil that comes our way (which presumably would make God a silent partner in the practice of evil).

God sides with humanity. The Israelites of the Bible and Christians for that matter believe that God is in a covenant relationship with people. When suffering comes our way, we may feel lonely and unknown by others and by God. But that is far from the truth of who God is. God doesn’t side with random events or evil against humanity. Instead, God is our advocate and God is with us.

Second, we can take solace that God is affected by the evil that affects us. On this point, I agree with Kushner only when he says that God hates suffering. God does hate suffering. God personally knows suffering and evil. God endured the public shame and death on the cross. Michael Jinkins writes,

the Christian faith has confessed that God assumed into his own eternal Being (in Jesus Christ, in the entire event of his incarnation leading ultimately to the cross) the pain, sorrow and darkness of this suffering world, and has taken on the tormented shape of our human brokenness. (Invitation to Theology, 85)

God has experienced suffering and evil and continues to do so when humanity follows a path that is not consistent with God’s desires.

As one writer put it, “If God had not entered into our suffering and death, then there is no hope for redemption and pain.”[1] Because God has entered into suffering, he can respond and even overcome evil, which takes me to my third point.

Third, God responds to evil. God is stronger than evil. On the cross, Christ suffered great evil and yet he overcame that evil. Christ is victorious over the evil that he experienced. Likewise, God responds to the evil around us. He may have had power to prevent it, but the more significant question is not whether God has power to prevent evil from happening, but how God responds to the evil that comes our way.

Romans 8.28 gives us the confidence in God’s providence, “so that we know that God is always in control, even over the power of evil.” God being in control does not permit evil for a greater good. Instead, a more Christological approach would be to believe that despite the evil that confronts us, God works to bring redemption and good out of it.
T. F. Torrance put it well when he wrote that

The Cross of Christ tells us unmistakably that all physical evil, not only pain, suffering, disease, corruption, death, and of course cruelty and venom in animal as well as human behavior, but also ‘natural’ calamities, devastations, and monstrosities, are an outrage against the love of God and a contradiction of good order in his creation. (Divine and Contingent Order)

The truth is that evil and suffering are an outrage against the love of God. God’s love is offended and pained by suffering and death. To subscribe to Kushner’s view would conceivably deny God’s ability to create out of nothing or even raise Jesus from the dead. God may have hopes like the rest of us for events to work out for the better, but God is “limited in his ability to do anything about evil.” When evil assaults us, we must hold on to the hope in God to deliver us from the suffering. Kushner provides no hope when we confront our suffering but to cross our fingers that somehow everything falls into place and the evil is overcome.

We may not have answers as to the reasons for evil. Faith may not necessarily answer the question of “why does evil exist?” As Jinkins put it, “(Faith tells) us that the God we worship has assumed the shape of our suffering humanity in order to deliver us from the darkness and danger that threaten to consume us.” God is with us when evil exists around us. God will deliver us from the darkness and the pain that wants to take a hold of our lives.

During times of suffering, I have found peace in these word, liberally taken from Hebrews 13: “(verse 3) Remember those who are in prison, as though you were in prison with them; those who are being tortured, as though you were being tortured.” I think of Jesus who ultimately is able to be with me and remember me in my times of suffering. Jesus suffered (Heb. 13.12) and he offers us hope, and eventual redemption in the midst of our suffering (Heb. 13.13-14).


Notes:[1] Ngien, Dennis. “The God who Suffers.”, Christianity Today, February 3, 1997 Vol. 41, No. 2, Page 38

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3 Responses to “Why do bad things happen to good people?”


  1. 1 Scott

    Eddy,
    Thanks for sharing your academic reflection in this post. I completely agree with you about your criticism of Kushner - a God who is powerless in suffering is also irrelevant. What the cross reveals is not God robbed or bankrupt of power, but God disposing of a powerful response to suffering in order to take on our experience of powerless in the face both of sin and of innocent suffering. As you say, “God is sovereign and is in control and has power over evil.” It is precisely God’s power in powerlessness - not just elimination of powerlessness & evil suffering - that provides hope of redemptive purpose for the suffering & evil that we experience.

    If I may, however, I take point with a point you make in closing. You say, “God is with us when evil exists around us. God will deliver us from the darkness and the pain that wants to take a hold of our lives.” God is with us in the face of evil - the entirety of the Old & New Testaments attest to this. However, God’s deliverance from darkness & pain isn’t promised, or - to be better worded for our western legal mindset - isn’t guaranteed to us on this side of heaven. I believe that God will redeem our pain & suffering - both here & in the age to come; but history & experience point to many experiences where deliverance from evil didn’t come, even in the face of faithful perseverance & prayer.

    You are aware of my own experience of this. And while I hope in God for the miracle (& deliverance) that God’s healing power is capable of in my daughter’s life, I don’t understand from the Bible that that deliverance to be promised or guaranteed in this world, nor for that lack of deliverance - even with the redemptive assurance - to be something we’ll understand. I take the witness of Job, who never received the “explanation” for his experience of evil & suffering, even though ch.1 provides a great explanation that God could have shared with Job.

    What suffering raises is our desire for explanations, though even a proper explanation doesn’t satisfy. Even Jesus cried out our cry for explanation on the cross, “Why have you forsaken me?,” even though the cross was a declaration of Christ’s victory over evil & innocent suffering. Even Jesus, in Isaiah’s prophecy, is described as someone “familiar with suffering.” It isn’t the escape from or elimination of suffering that reveals God’s power, but God’s familiarity with and presence in the midst of suffering & powerlessness that speaks to God’s power & true character.

    And this is what satisfies in the midst of suffering - God’s presence, even though often the presence of God ‘feels’ distant & isolating & silent. As I’ve experienced it - with only a fraction of what Job suffered - part of the redemption of God’s presence in the midst of suffering has been what Job has modeled to me –> that is, greater authenticity with God and the refining work, not of redemption of sin, but from refined love of God & from God that is not defeated nor drained by suffering, but shown more true & more powerful.

  2. 2 Eddy E

    Thanks Scott for your thoughts and clarity. You’re right, deliverance from evil is not necessarily promised in this age. It might but the tension but I think for me I always want to hold on to the hope of deliverance in the near future rather than a fatalism that this is my lot in life (I suppose it doesn’t have to be that kind of a dichotomy).

    Of course, what that deliverance means is not that everything is “perfect” in this age, since we are still living within a fallen world where God’s reign is not established fully. Rev. 7 promises that every tear would be wiped, so our ultimate redemption and healing will eventually come when we are in God’s glory in heaven.

  3. 3 Scott

    You’re right about how suffering raises the threat of fatalism, to which Job definitely flirts. In place of fatalism, however, what I believe Job models is authenticity with God. Job’s authenticity is brutal, ugly & awkward to listen to at times, but what God later affirms as Job’s righteousness is the depth of resolve that produces Job’s authenticity with God. Job can be so bold & honest with God, not because of fatalism, but rather its opposite - his conviction that God will work redemption in the midst of suffering.

    I think the temptation toward fatalism is still about the search for an explanation, as though an explanation would bring satisfaction or even a certain kind of power. In direct contrast to explanations, Job is pushed to seek God’s presence in the midst of suffering to restore value & meaning to Job’s life. It is precisely this posture that I believe God affirms as righteousness in Job in the end. In that way, I think the lesson of Job is to reject fatalism in exchange for an authentic, even if risky, relationship with God.

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