I read the words and my eyes brim with tears. I'm sitting by the window and bright sun radiating off fresh snow bathes the room in cold light.
I continue reading: "And what, if anything, can be made of the prayers we've whispered in the middle of nights, restless with fear and the threat of loss, prayers that have had no apparent answer, no just-in-the-nick-of-time rescue?" *
I read the question again "How do we say that God is good when life is not?" When you bury a child or a parent too early, and Job's comforters tell you they are in a "better place". When you watch your body succumb to cancer, and you know that you will not live to see your daughter's fifth birthday; when your husband of less than a year dies in a tragic accident - how, then, do you say that God is good?
At the end of a life, every single human being has a reason to believe God is not good. But the opposite is also true. At the end of every life, there is evidence of God's goodness in every breath we've been given.
It is tempting to want clean answers, to be able to point to healings and miracles. But clean answers have never helped the one who is suffering.
How do we say that God is good when life is not?
There are no easy answers. We limp our way through this question, sometimes full of faith and confidence that the character of God is ultimately good; sometimes shaking our heads saying "Lord I believe, help my unbelief." Theologians call this 'theodicy' - a noun that literally means "the vindication of divine goodness and providence in view of the existence of evil." Vindication of divine goodness - God on trial, his very character being questioned.
As I think about this question, I realize that this is some of the thread through Passages Through Pakistan. Yes, Passages is about Pakistan, and being a third culture kid/missionary kid, and living between worlds. But ultimately, Passages is my testament of faith. In Passages I work through what it is to believe God loves, God cares, and God is good when life is not. The tapestry of God's redemptive plan is not without pain or suffering, but ultimately I have deep confidence that God is good, even when life is not.
This I knew, and I knew it well: when you're six and you wake up at five in the morning, away from home and unconditional love in a dormitory of seven other little girls, just as young and equally homesick and insecure, there is no one to comfort you. When you are twelve, and your backside aches for a week because of the beating of a house parent, there is no person to comfort you. When you question why dads and babies die in the middle of the night, there is no person to answer you. When you are sixteen, and you feel misunderstood by all those around you, unable to articulate your heart, there is no person to comfort you. When you are eighteen, and your heart is breaking at the thought of leaving all you know and all you love, there is no person to comfort you. My faith was more than theology - it was a living, breathing entity. It wrapped me with a profound sense of comfort and love, and I knew beyond any previous doubts that God was real. I knew in the marrow of my bones, and the depths of my soul, that there was something greater than boarding school loss, stronger than the grief of goodbyes, deeper than the pain of misunderstanding. I knew that redemption was not just a theological idea, but that somehow it was more real than anything on this earth. Faith was the story written on my life, and my life was witness to a greater reality.***Teach us to Want: Longing, Ambition and the Life of Faith by Jen Pollock Michel
**Passages Through Pakistan pages 165-166
Readers - Rachel Pieh Jones has published a review of Passages Through Pakistan. You can read it