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Ep 131: Coming to terms with injustice (Ecc 3:16).
Description
Pray
Read: Ecc 3:16.
Meditation
One of the most common objections to Christianity you will ever hear is this question: If there is a God, why does he allow suffering? Nobody likes it when things hurt. Perhaps people have raised this question with you before. There are unbelievers who deny God, and then the reason they give is because they think he should not or would not allow suffering if he really existed. Maybe you’ve asked this question yourself.
So what do we say? What is our answer? Why does God allow suffering?
I want to reframe the question slightly. When someone says, “Why does God allow suffering?”, the assumption is that we should not have to suffer. In other words, an injustice has occurred. We are assuming that the suffering should not have happened in the first place. And so the question of suffering is, more fundamentally, a question of injustice.
Solomon tackles this question head on in the Book of Ecclesiastes, and in the verse we are meditating on particularly. He doesn’t address it academically or theoretically. He takes on the question in all its grim reality. As we think of starvation in some countries, oppressive dictatorships, and things like the slave trade, this question looms large. More personally, as we consider the wrongs we have suffered at the hands of others, our faith may be tested. And so the question is there: Why does God permit suffering to exist?
This is a big topic and a challenging question.
In previous meditations I have likened Ecclesiastes to a labyrinth, a giant maze that is puzzling and perplexing. As Solomon addresses the problem of suffering here, we are faced with another enigma. This question leads us into a part of the labyrinth where it is easy to get lost and despair. There are many twists, turns, and dead ends when it comes to this issue. Solomon is going to lead us down a series of paths to help us understand it in the next section of chapter three, and this is a journey that we need to take to understand how we may fear God in a fallen world.
In this meditation, we set out on that journey. The first thing we need to do with the problem of suffering and injustice is to admit that it is a reality, and we see this in verse 16. We need to admit that injustice is real, come to terms with it, be honest and say that it exists. A Christian cannot answer the question by pretending it’s not there. This is exactly where Solomon begins in verse 16: “Moreover, I saw under the sun that in the place of justice, even there was wickedness, and in the place of righteousness, even there was wickedness.”
Solomon does not pull any punches or deny the truth. Injustice is a reality. We certainly see this in the world around us. Over the last hundred years (at the time of writing) we have seen the injustice of the Nazi regime, or Russia under Stalin as he robbed and oppressed his citizens. We see it in Australia today. We see the injustice of abortion. We see it on a very personal level too. In chapter 4 verse 1 Solomon says: “Again I saw all the oppressions that are done under the sun. And behold, the tears of the oppressed, and they had no one to comfort them. On the side of their oppressors there was power, and there was no one to comfort them.”
There are many people crying in the world in this moment. Sex slaves and paupers, orphans with nowhere to go. There are bruised and battered women and children living under the roof of tyrannical Australian husbands and fathers. There are husbands living under the constant oppression of the sharp tongues of their wives. Perhaps you yourself have been abused in some way. Injustice is everywhere. Even something as simple as being teased by someone, even a friend, or being accused unjustly can hurt deeply.
As Christians, we do not try to hide from the truth. We do not pretend that life is all roses and butterflies