Providence Means That
Even Life’s Tragedies Are Redeemable
In
2012 I jotted down all the reasons I could think of why I am a Christian. I
found 26 so I decided to serialise them in a blog every fortnight for a year.
The
first four explained why I think belief in a creator is reasonable and credible
from what I have learned from science. The next two examined the human
condition and found that the way we are wired is entirely consistent with what
the Bible says about us.
Now,
I am moving on to some theological musings. Firstly (Reason
7), what the Bible calls 'sin' accurately describes the undeniable mess the
world is in.
And now, what theologians call 'providence' means that even life's worst tragedies are redeemable. I've observed it so consistently that I have come to see it as evidence of God at work in the world.
What
good could come from your father committing suicide, from your stepfather
abusing you, from your three daughters dying of cancer, from your family being
murdered before your eyes and from ending up as a street kid in a foreign land?
Read on…
Are
such people the victims of chance? This view holds
that our universe is subject to pure randomness. There is no rhyme and
reason to the way things happen, everything is meaningless, nothing
is fair in the world and there’s nothing you can do about it.
Or
are they at the mercy of fate? This view holds
that the universe is manipulated and controlled in every detail. It’s all
written in the stars, everything is determined beforehand so your destiny is
sealed and there’s nothing you can do about it.
Providence,
unlike chance, says there is a rhyme and reason to the way
things are because God wisely governs his universe, holding all things
together. Life makes sense.
But
providence, unlike fate, says there is something we can do
about our future because God weaves our real choices into the narrative of
his glorious plan.
The
Bible verse that perhaps encapsulates best what providence is about is Romans
8.28.
And
we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him,
who have been called according to his purpose.
Providence
means that, if you are a Christian, everything works out in
the end. Everything. That doesn’t mean that God spares those who love him the
worst things life could throw at them. Patently, that is not the case.
Globally, Christians are among the most hated people on Earth. No surprise
there; Jesus said it would be so (see Mark 13.13 and John 15.18 for example).
But
providence means that even life’s greatest sorrows and disasters are redeemable.
Something good can come from them and indeed the very greatest blessings often
seem to be born from the deepest adversity and tragedy. I have seen it so many
times that I have come to view it as evidence of God at work.
Providence
means this: Almighty God, in his unrivalled sovereignty and immeasurable
wisdom, sees to it that all circumstances, however dire, however adverse,
however tragic, in the end work out for his glory and for the
joy of a particular group of people; those who 1) love God and 2) are called
according to his purpose.
Oh,
I love the doctrine of providence!
The
tragedy is that for those who do not love God and who are therefore not called
according to his purpose, suffering and tragedy are rarely productive. They
tend much more to lead to bitterness, regret, despair and a hardening of the
heart.
I
have often noticed in pastoral work that personal grief, say the untimely death
of a loved one or the birth of a severely disabled child, or a messy divorce,
seems to either draw the people involved towards God or provoke a drifting away
from faith – or worse, a bitter hatred of him.
One
of Britain's most popular Christian songwriters, Matt
Redman, has often spoken publicly of his experience of being
told when he was 7 that his father had died,
then learning two years later that the cause was suicide.
He has also spoken about subsequently being abused as a teenager over a long
period by his stepfather (for which he was convicted and jailed).
You
can only imagine the confusion, pain, loneliness and self-doubt that
those events would stir in a child’s heart. But refusing a path of bitterness
and choosing to turn to God in trust, Matt testifies to healing in his soul and
how he has, by the grace of God, been able to break the cycle of grief and
become a loving father in a wholesome family, even writing the tenderest songs
about God's Father heart.
A
friend of mine from our time in France, Jacques
Barbero, was for about 20 years a militant union leader in the steel
industry. Jacques was a convinced atheist. Then tragedy struck. His three
daughters, one after the other, contracted leukaemia. Jacques and his wife had
the unimaginable sorrow of helplessly watching each of them fight a losing
battle against their illness. They had to lay their three precious girls to
rest before any of them reached adulthood.
For
many unbelievers, such a devastating grief would have surely hardened their
atheism. How could a God of love have allowed such a thing?
But
some time after his season of distress, Jacques bumped into an industrial
chaplain who explained that sickness and death are never God’s perfect will for
us. They come from living in a broken and fallen world. He urged Jacques to
read the Bible.
Jacques’
life was turned upside down. The consolation, the balm, the release he had so
longed for - and had found nowhere else - flooded his soul. His life radically
changed direction as the open wound of his sorrows found healing at last.
Jacques
started a charity called Une Bible Par Foyer (A Bible for
Every Home) offering people God’s word in marketplaces and street
corners.
But most of all, this man who had been angry, militant, confrontational and anti-establishment became one of the gentlest, warmest, kindest and most peace-loving people I have ever known. He is also irrepressibly cheerful and positive. He has had a huge influence on everyone who knows him and he has a gift for bringing together deeply hostile factions so they work together in unity like no one I know.
Just
today (this was written 17th March 2013), I was told about a man called William
Sempija. William fled Rwanda after his parents and siblings were butchered
before his eyes during the genocide. As a refugee he ended up as a street kid
in Kampala in neighbouring Uganda. He lived ten years on the streets before he
was spotted by a Christian and fostered. Miraculously, William began to achieve
among the highest school grades in Uganda. After some time, William became a
Christian and he now works with street children in Bwaise, Kampala. Over 250
children, orphans from war, AIDS or victims of poverty, are now cared for by
his charity.
I am not saying that any of this makes Matt's traumas, Jacques and his wife's pain or William's suffering as somehow O.K. That’s not what providence is about. The point I am making is that through providence, beautiful things can come from even life’s worst tragedies. They needn’t define our lives or condemn us to decades of resentment and regret.
Stories
like these are legion in the Christian world and it is a running theme in
Scripture too.
In
Genesis 37-50, for example, there is the story of Joseph. An impulsive and
gifted young man provokes the jealousy of his brothers who sell him into
slavery. He ends up languishing in jail in Egypt after being falsely accused of
sexual assault. Due to his gift of interpreting dreams he is brought before
Pharaoh and made Vice President of Egypt. His rise to prominence averts mass
starvation when a seven-year famine follows a seven-year period of plenty. The
remarkable developments in the story show how he is eventually reconciled to
his eleven brothers. The story ends when he reveals himself to them saying “You
intended to harm me, but God intended it for good to accomplish what is now being
done, the saving of many lives.”
Then
there is the story of Ruth. It’s about a widowed young foreigner who shows
amazing and sacrificial loyalty to her Israelite refugee mother-in-law (Naomi)
when she could have pursued an opportunity to remarry while still young
instead. The unexpected twists in the story show how it just so happened that
everything worked out for good; Ruth eventually ended up harvesting in the
field of a man named Boaz who just so happened to be distantly related to
Naomi. And Boaz, under local laws and customs, it just so turned out had a
moral obligation to consider marrying Ruth. The family tree growing from their
marriage included David (Israel’s greatest king) and their Messiah, Jesus.
What about the New Testament where, as Louie Giglio observes, all the good guys get killed? We know the Bible claims that it worked out well in the end for Jesus - raised on the third day. I'll say more about that in Reason 14. But what about John the Baptist (beheaded), Stephen (stoned), James (beheaded) and Peter (crucified upside-down)? What about Paul (imprisoned, severely flogged, exposed to death again and again, given the thirty-nine lashes five times, beaten with rods three times, pelted with stones, shipwrecked on three occasions, constantly in danger, deprived of sleep, often hungry and thirsty - and eventually beheaded)?
Even then, their deaths resulted in an explosion of growth for the infant church. Persecution scattered Christians everywhere and the church rapidly spread. Tertullian, in his AD 197 work Apologeticus noted that the blood of the martyrs was the seed of the church. The more Christians were suppressed the more the message of Jesus got out. That so many were willing to lay down their lives rather than deny their faith speaks of the strength of their conviction fuelled by witnessing the resurrection of Christ from the dead.
This is more than just ancient history though. These events illustrate the principle that tragedy, even death, does not have the final word for those who love God and are called according to his plan.
In
the mid 1990’s I went through the worst period of my life. Kathie suffered
three miscarriages in a little over a year and our children were being bullied
and mugged at school. Our income was slashed making it hard to live on our
budget. I was in a high-pressure/low reward job where I was being publicly
undermined and forced out of work. Kathie was being stalked and threatened at
her job in a local hospital for refusing to cover up a professional error. Our
house was a building site - I could go on.
I
would be lying if I were to say that my faith didn’t wobble at all during that
2-3 year period. Pain and grief and discouragement and pressure seemed
relentless and overwhelming. Doubts haunted me. Cynicism threatened to drag me
down.
But
I look back now and see that time as the most fertile ever period in my
personal, emotional and spiritual development. I am so thankful for the
character built in me over those years. I am grateful for the way it drove me
to my knees – and so many prayers prayed through gritted teeth at that time
have been answered over the long term. My family and I have truly prospered in
every way.
We
know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have
been called according to his purpose.
I’ll
leave the last word to Malcolm Muggeridge. Born in 1903, he was an agnostic for
most of his life, but he became a Christian at the age of 66 and said this in
1978:
“Contrary
to what might be expected, I look back on experiences that at the time seemed
especially desolating and painful, with particular satisfaction. Indeed, I can
say with complete truthfulness that everything I have learned in my
seventy-five years in this world, everything that has truly enhanced and
enlightened my existence, has been through affliction and not through
happiness, whether pursued or attained. In other words, if it ever were to be
possible to eliminate affliction from our earthly existence by means of some
drug or other medical mumbo jumbo . . . the result would not be to make life
delectable, but to make it too banal or trivial to be endurable. This of course
is what the cross [of Christ] signifies, and it is the cross more than anything
else, that has called me inexorably to Christ.”
That’s
the eighth reason I am a Christian; my experience of providence. Time and
again I have observed that life’s misfortunes do not have the last word for
those who love God and who are called according to his glorious plan.
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