Too often we only think in terms of cause and effect. Now, of course, cause and effect makes sense some of the time: I strike a billiard ball and it rolls with the amount of force I hit it with. I think this becomes dangerous, though, when we make God into a cause and effect God--especially with our pain and hurts and lessons learned in those times. Let me explain.
After a loss or hurt or trial, we begin to look back and see what we learned--about God, about ourselves, about life. The cause was the hurt; the effect was the growth. This can lead us to think of God as being responsible for the hurt--bringing hurt so that we can learn one specific lesson. Let me offer another thought. Instead of thinking in terms of cause and effect, think in terms of story. As a Christian, put your life into the story of death and resurrection. See the hurts as the moments that bring death, but the lessons as those elements of life and resurrection!
Sometimes God does not cause the trials; they happen for all kinds of reasons. But God is not hindered by them. Seeing resurrection (hope, growth, life) after the death (defeat, trial, hurt) helps us to see the work of God as being against the evils that threaten, rather than being their author. To put it in terms of yesterday, God didn't give me the panic attack, but he has definitely worked through it!
Can you see moments of death in your life from which God has brought resurrection? Do you have a resurrection story to share?
After a loss or hurt or trial, we begin to look back and see what we learned--about God, about ourselves, about life. The cause was the hurt; the effect was the growth. This can lead us to think of God as being responsible for the hurt--bringing hurt so that we can learn one specific lesson. Let me offer another thought. Instead of thinking in terms of cause and effect, think in terms of story. As a Christian, put your life into the story of death and resurrection. See the hurts as the moments that bring death, but the lessons as those elements of life and resurrection!
Sometimes God does not cause the trials; they happen for all kinds of reasons. But God is not hindered by them. Seeing resurrection (hope, growth, life) after the death (defeat, trial, hurt) helps us to see the work of God as being against the evils that threaten, rather than being their author. To put it in terms of yesterday, God didn't give me the panic attack, but he has definitely worked through it!
Can you see moments of death in your life from which God has brought resurrection? Do you have a resurrection story to share?