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because if all of u know he`s or it is the almighty

2007-01-06 12:34:57 · 12 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

12 answers

Bad things started happening because of Adam and Eve. Things happen for reasons. A lot of stuff like earthquakes and hurricanes, I think, is God saying I am still here and still mighty. And when People die or get murdered maybe something in their life if they had lived would have been something they couldn't handle. He also does things to make us stronger. And we also have free will

2007-01-06 12:39:54 · answer #1 · answered by suzy-Q 4 · 0 2

God is allowing time to pass for people to come to the realization as to whom they want to govern them. Satan told Adam and Eve that they did not need God. So, they listened and disobeyed their creator. They listened to the "father of the lie". These 6000 years have proven to us who we need to govern us. It is the one true God, Jehovah. Satan taunted Jehovah, and so that is why God is permitting suffering and wickedness to continue on. But, not for long. There are many in today's world that are proving Satan the liar that he is. God will step in and destroy him and bring forth a paradise earth again as he originally intended. Then you will see that good things will continue to take place on a peaceful earth forever.

2007-01-06 20:43:11 · answer #2 · answered by Gail B 3 · 0 0

Because "god" does not control us.

Bad things happen because we as humans perceive them as being bad... Obviosly things like murder and rape are bad, that is just wrong. What about war? Crusades anyone?

2007-01-06 20:40:09 · answer #3 · answered by riecanth 1 · 0 1

GOD doesn't allow any thing bad to happen we make are blue prints its not GOD decision.GOD love you i doxo

2007-01-06 20:40:32 · answer #4 · answered by cilia 3 · 0 1

believers in god will answer you with one of their biggest contradictory statements. They believe that god is all powerful, yet they believe that sin is the result of satan and man's free will....which is contradictory in a world ruled by an all powerful, all good entitiy.

2007-01-06 20:38:35 · answer #5 · answered by ? 6 · 1 1

Because God is a myth.

2007-01-06 20:42:23 · answer #6 · answered by Rob B 4 · 0 1

Who judges what is bad and what is not?
Ask a child if a medicine is good!

2007-01-06 20:40:56 · answer #7 · answered by PragmaticAlien 5 · 0 1

as i understand it if there is no bad then there would be no good and if there is only good people would go crazy life would be without problems hence having no real meaning.

2007-01-06 20:39:28 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

The curious as well as the critics of Christianity ask this question. If God is all-powerful and all loving, then why does He permit evil and suffering in the world? Various answers have been given, but permanently settling the issue is impossible because so many of our answers raise further questions. Nevertheless, our lack of ability to answer the question perfectly does not mean that we cannot offer solutions. Of course, I do not assume to be able to answer these questions definitively, but I can offer some solutions.

First of all, it is possible that God has reasons for allowing evil to exist that we simply cannot understand. In this the Christian can have confidence in God knowing that His ways are above our ways (Isaiah 55:8-9). As the Bible says, the just shall live by faith (Hab. 2:4).

Second, God may be letting evil run its course in order to prove that evil is malignant and that suffering, which is the unfortunate product of evil, is further proof that anything contrary to God’s will is bad, harmful, painful, and leads to death.

God gave Adam dominion over the world (Gen. 1:28). When he rebelled against God, he set in motion an entire series of events and changed the very nature of man and creation. Both were affected by sin. Creation was no longer a paradise but bore thorns and thistles (Gen. 3:17-18; Rom. 8:22). People became sinful (Rom. 5:12; Eph. 2:3), who were haters of God (Rom. 3:9-12), etc. The only conclusion to such a situation is death. Jesus said, "And except those days should be shortened, there should no flesh be saved: but for the elect’s sake those days shall be shortened" (Matt. 24:22).

Sin is rebellion against God and His created order, but God has not left us alone in this fallen world. He continued to enter this world--pointing us to Himself, to truth, to morality, purity, and love. He used the evil of the world (liars, perjurers, the envious, etc.,) to bring His Son to the cross so that we might have the opportunity to obtain eternal life. In this, God has not stepped away from fallen creation but has stepped into it by becoming Jesus. God works within the fallen world to effect change, and He uses fallen people to accomplish His will. In this, He is proving His sovereignty over evil, suffering, and rebellious people--proving that sin and evil are utterly futile and that He is worthy of honor and glory.

A third possible reason that God is letting evil occur is so that on the day of judgment, the condemned will have no right to say that their sentence is unjust. God is not stopping people from exercising their free will. Think about this: If someone said that God should stop evil and suffering, then should God then stop all evil and suffering? If God only stopped some of it, then we would still be asking the same question of why it exists.

So, if we want God to stop evil and suffering, then He must stop all of it. We have no problem with this when it means stopping a catastrophe or a murder or a rape. But what about when someone thinks of something evil? Evil is destructive whether it is acted out or not. Hatred and bigotry in someone’s heart is wrong. If it is wrong and if God is to stop all evil, then He must stop that person from thinking his own thoughts. To do that, God must remove his freedom of thought. Furthermore, which person on the earth has not thought something evil? God would be required, then, to stop all people from exercising their free will. This is something God has chosen not to do. Therefore, we could say that one of the reasons that God permits evil and suffering is that of man’s free will.

Fourth, it is quite possible that God uses the suffering to do good. In other words, He produces patience through tribulation (Rom. 5:3). Or He may desire to save someone through it. Take for example, the account of Joseph who was sold into slavery by His brothers. What they did was wrong, and Joseph suffered greatly for it. But, later, God raised up Joseph in Egypt to make provisions for the people of that land during the coming drought of seven years. Not only was Egypt saved but also his family and brothers who originally sold him into slavery. Joseph finally says to them, "You meant it for evil, but God meant it for good" (Gen. 50:15-21). Of course, the greatest example of God using evil for good is the death of Christ. Evil people brought him to the cross, but God used that cross as the means to save the world.

But then we must ask, if this is true, are we working against God by working against evil and suffering? No, we are not. God says he does not want us to sin and suffer. But it is simply true that God can use evil despite its apparent despicable nature.

God is in the world using the world and its failures for His glory and the benefit of those who listen to Him.

But then, what about those who seem to suffer innocently with no benefit resulting? What about the woman who is raped or the innocent bystander who is killed by a stray bullet. In both cases, the victims and families suffer nothing but pain and loss. What good can this possibly be?

I think that the answer is two-fold. One, ultimately, no one is innocent. All have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God (Rom. 3:23) and are by nature children of wrath (Eph. 2:3). There is none innocent. Though this is biblically accurate, it does not satisfy the question emotionally. Why do little babies suffer for things they have not done? I must acknowledge that I do not know. Ultimately, we must trust God who knows the beginning from the end and sees the grand picture. He will have the final word, and He will be vindicated.

Conclusion

Suffering is the result of human sin. The world is not the way that God created it; and because of that, all are vulnerable to the effects of sin in the world. Why does one person suffer and another does not? Why do catastrophes happen to some and not to others? It is because sin is in the world. But there will come a day when the Lord will return and cleanse this world of all sin and all suffering.

"And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away." (Rev. 21:4).

2014-11-13 10:57:44 · answer #9 · answered by The Lightning Strikes 7 · 0 0

to show you how powerful he is and to show you shadows of hell.
Like the ten plagues on egypt, those were all shadows of hell.

2007-01-06 20:40:08 · answer #10 · answered by ProjectShowbread 2 · 0 2

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