Why Doesn't God Do Something?Muestra
Judgment Day
Sam: Lyn, I’ve been thinking. Have you been trying to tell me that everyone goes to heaven?
Lyn: I wish. The reality is that there also has to be a day of reckoning for the wicked. Do you really think that Joseph Stalin and a three-year-old toddler should both finish up in the same place? That would be unfair. And unjust. The Psalmist Asaph discovered this. ‘You have set them in slippery places,’ he said to God about the wicked, ‘and they are destroyed in a moment, swept away utterly by terrors’ (Psalm 73:18, 19).
Sam: Mm, I’ve never thought of it like before.
Lyn: If you believe in justice, Sam, you have to see the big picture. In Western society today, we have this kind of saccharine belief that after death there is some nice place where everyone goes regardless.
Sam: Yes, I’ve seen that myself. Someone can be a drunk driver who has a serious accident at two o’clock in the morning, but at the funeral, he becomes a really good neighbor and a great family man. Someone else can be a rogue and a villain, but after they die, suddenly they become fine upstanding citizens.
Lyn: Well, that’s putting it rather bluntly. But my point is that if there is no reckoning, then there is no justice, and that leaves us in a state of bleakness and despair. Because deep down we all know that there is a difference between good and bad, between wrong and right, and that it must be addressed. Our only hope is that there is a God who is both fair and just
Psalm 73:17-19, Habakkuk 2:6-20
What next? Which verse or verses really stand out to you from these passages?
Escritura
Acerca de este Plan
Why doesn't God do something about suffering and trouble? This ancient question is still being asked today. Doesn't God care? Jesus suffered for us and was well acquainted with grief. Christianity was born in suffering and the Bible has much to say about it. This Bible Plan features lively coversations between Lyn and Sam who raise provocative questions and offer intriguing responses.
More