Year of Biblical Literacy: The School of Life - The Pain and Suffering of God
Notes
Transcript
Isaiah 53 (NIV)
The School of Life
The Pain and Suffering of God
Introduction: If it is your first time joining us - welcome. We have
dedicated this year to Biblical Literacy; meaning we as a church are
reading the Bible for ourselves to know first hand what it teaches and in
order to be shaped by the story of God. In our current series - The school
of Life - we have been discussing pain and suffering - how we go through
it, and how we approach God in it and if you’ve been paying attention in
your reading through the Year of Biblical Literacy you’ve noticed that there
is a lot of suffering in the Bible - in fact I don’t know of a a Biblical
character who doesn’t experience some amount of pain and suffering in
their life. So as we are reading along, and studying, the scripture is offering
us many fellow travelers on this life’s road of pain and suffering - it gives
us words to identity and express our pain and suffering - it gives us songs
to sing, and prayers to pray to bring us comfort through the dark night of
the soul.. My prayer is that as we read, and assimilate this story, these
characters will become our close companions and their songs and their
prayers will become ours.. that we will truly be shaped by them….
It has been mentioned before - when it comes to evil - the Bible doesn’t
give us a discourse on the origin of Evil - it’s mentioned a handful of times
- in Isaiah, and then again by Jesus in the Gospel of John, then John
himself - but it’s not really the details and explanation that we are looking
for. Anyone feel a similar thing when we read through Job or about pain
and suffering?? - Job’s questions of unjustly suffering are never answered
- he never gets the why answered. - The Heck??
I will say Job is radically changed by his suffering - dare I say, he is even
bettered, refined by his suffering - At the end Job says, - “I know that you
can do anything, and no one can stop you. You asked, ‘Who is this
that questions my wisdom with such ignorance?’ It is I—and I was
talking about things I knew nothing about, things far too wonderful for
me. You said, ‘Listen and I will speak! I have some questions for
you, and you must answer them.’ I had only heard about you
before, but now I have seen you with my own eyes. I take back
everything I said, and I sit in dust and ashes to show my repentance.”
- A powerful, life altering encounter with God...
But I have to say this is still not the vindication that I’m looking for in my
own life. I want encounter - But I also want answers - And I imagine that
some are left wondering - is that it? Is Christianity’s only answer to
suffering - God is not the author of evil, God is at war with evil, God uses
evil for Good, or like in Job’s case you are too small to understand… and
besides what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger…?? Is that it?
Like Job and our Psalm from last week, Psalm 77, many of our questions
don’t get answered, many of our problems are not resolved. The truth is
the Bible doesn’t give us an answer to our pain and suffering - instead it
gives us a person. Jesus
In Jesus, God enters the story of humanity, he himself suffers the fate of
mankind.
Christianity is the only worldview in which God has suffered with His
Creation. Christianity is also the only religion in which one cannot say God has done nothing about the problem of evil. Rather, God has dealt
with it in a just fashion and he has extended the offer of salvation to all
humanity, made possible through Jesus’ work on the cross.
Skeptics can use evil, pain and suffering as a stone against Christianity,
but there is no consolation in any other worldview. Christianity is the only
religion or worldview that has an answer to evil and suffering. We are living
in an abnormal world which God will restore.
Dorothy Sayers writing about the Incarnation of God, said - “For whatever
reason God chose to make man as he is - limited and suffering and subject
to sorrows and death - God had the honesty and the courage to take his
own medicine. Whatever game he is playing with his creation, he has kept
his own rules and played fair. He can exact nothing from man that he has
not exacted from himself. He has himself gone through the whole human
experience, from the trivial irritations of family life and the cramping
restrictions of hard work and lack of money to the worst horrors of pain
and humiliation, defeat, despair and death. When he was a man, he played
the man. He was born in poverty and died in disgrace and thought it well
worthwhile.” - Dorothy Sayers, Letters to a Diminished Church
This morning I want to consider how the Pain and Suffering of God speaks to our own pain and suffering.
1. The Man of Sorrows
1. Many in the modern age see the career of Jesus as a huge success
with a tragic turn of events that brought about rejection, suffering,
persecution and death. Jesus is a success story turned tragedy. But
nothing could be further from the truth. The story of Jesus is one of
suffering from beginning to end.
2. Jesus, The King of heaven and earth, the incarnate second person
of the trinity, was born in the 1st century - first of all a brutal time of
history to be alive. The Jewish people were under Roman tyranny
and had been under tyranny for hundreds of years - which meant
slavery, slaughterings, and just an uncomfortable life in general.
Jesus was born in obscurity, and not in the limelight. There was a lot
of controversy around his conception and brith - a pretty sketchy
situation - born of a virgin - in a very socially conservative religious
culture. Honestly - how many people do you think believed that
story? His family would have been social outcasts - in fact when
they go to their home town to have and have the baby - none of
their family bring them in - that would be unheard of in that
hospitable culture - but the whole situation with Jesus was taboo so he is literally born in a barn. He is presented to the poor and
insignificant and not to the rich and prestigious at his birth - the
magi are not kings - they’re weirdo magicians who are obsessed
with stars.
3. On top of that - King Herod - a tyrant and very successful murderer
- When Jesus is two years of age tries to hunt him down, causing
Jesus and his family to be Jewish refugees in Egypt fora number of
years. Upon return -living in Nazareth - He experienced hardship
and oppression under Roman tyranny, most likely the death of
Joseph, his adopted father (Never mentioned after Jesus’ youth), to
his rejection by his family when he begins his messianic ministry he’s out of his mind….
4. Isn’t it amazing to see who Jesus identifies with in his life and
ministry: Remember Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount - The good news
he brought was for the poor and broken, little lowly people. This is
who he came for, this is who he was with in daily life - the
commoner, the working class man, the sick, the poor, the outcast,
the prostitute, the insane, the demon oppressed, the tax collector,
the scum of the earth…. oppressed, broken people, the people that
we would hide our faces from. Those that remind us of the terrible
place this world can be and the awful things that people have done
and do to each other. When you picture Jesus, being followed and
thronged as he went through the cities of Israel what do you see? If
we’re honest it probably looked something like Robin hood and his
crew, or a post-apocalyptic scene, or zombie apocalypse. I’ll tell
you what it wasn’t; it wasn’t clean, it wasn’t nice and put together, it
probably didn’t feel safe. I think it would startle us to see with our
own eyes the kind of company that Jesus kept.
5. See When God came to earth, he did not immune himself to the
human condition, he fully identified with it and took it upon himself.
As the Prophet said - “surely he has born our grief and carried our
sorrow” - He was a man of sorrows and one who was a close friend
to grief…
2. The Shame and Suffering of the Cross.
1. The New Testament refers again and again to the shame of the
cross, referring to it as an offense, a total and complete turn off to
people. Nicolai mentioned a few moths back that decent Roman
citizens didn’t even talk about the cross because it was so appalling
and grotesque. To this day I’m not sure humans have figured out a
more brutal or painful way to kill someone and yet this is the death
that God chose to die in order to redeem mankind. But it isn’t just
the fact that the physical sufferings of the cross or so awful - but it
is also the social shame and rejection as well.
2. God Forsaken.
1. The sufferings of Jesus Christ were not only physical, but also
emotional, psychological, and spiritual; He experienced pain of
rejection and separation from God the Father for our sake.
2. Remember what we are told by the gospel writers? “When the
sixth hour had come, there was darkness over the whole
land until the ninth hour. And at the ninth hour Jesus cried
with a loud voice, “Eloi, Eloi, lema sabachthani?” which
means, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” Mark 15:33-34
3. Jesus sufferings are immeasurable - yet when he cries out, he
never cries out about his pain - but he cries out about
his abandonment, and about his thirst? Isn’t that strange?
4. “After this, Jesus, knowing that all was now finished, said (to
fulfill the Scripture), “I thirst.” - John 19:28
5. Jesus is definitely thirsty - he’s dehydrated and drowning in his
own blood. But I’m not convinced that this is why Jesus says
this. We are told that he said this “fulfilling the scriptures” so
automatically we should be looking for a deeper meaning here.
Not only that but once again, we haven’t heard Jesus say one
word about his head, his back, his hands, his feet, his face - but
all of a sudden his thirst is unbearably painful?
6. Think about the horror as we get the full impact of what John is
saying at the thought of Jesus being thirsty.. The one who
announced to the Jewish nation -“Let anyone who is thirsty
come to me and drink. Whoever believes in me, as Scripture
has said, rivers of living water will flow from within
them.”……Has the living water run out? Has the water of life
failed? The fulness has been emptied, the infinite has become
finite, the source of life has come to death….
1. It’s incredible to realize that there was a MOMENT there on the
cross that for the first time in all eternity something happened
in the nature of God that had never happened before - there
was a tearing asunder of the Godhead - a gaping wound and
pain in the very heart of God - As the Father turns his face
from the sin laden son - and as the eternal son taste sin and
death for us - his enslaved creation. On the cross of Jesus,
God himself is crucified, but it’s not just the pain and suffering
of the son - The Father suffers the death of the Son he dearly
loves and takes upon himself the pain and suffering of
humanity. Wow. (Pause) The God of the Bible is not far off in
some remote palace, far removed from our pain and suffering
- But is one who himself is a victim of pain and suffering.
1. John Stott In his book - the Cross of Christ, wrote, “I could
never myself believe in God, if it were not for the cross. The
only God I believe in is the One Nietzsche ridiculed as "God
on the cross". In the real world of pain, how could one
worship a God who was immune to it? …….I have entered
many Buddhist temples in different asian countries and
stood respectfully before the statue of Buddha his legs
crossed, arms folded, eyes closed, the ghost of a smile
playing round his mouth, a remote look on his face,
detached from the agonies of the world.’ But each time
after a while I have had to turn away. And in my imagination
I have turned instead to that lonely, twisted, tortured figure
on the cross, nails through hands and feet, back lacerated,
limbs wrenched, brow bleeding from thorn pricks, mouth
dry and intolerably thirsty, plunged in God forsaken
darkness. That is the God for me! He laid aside his
immunity to pain. He entered our world of flesh and blood,
tears and death. He suffered for us…The cross of Christ is
God’s only self justification in such a world as ours.” - John
Stott, The Cross of Christ
7. Here is radical thing to think about - The Son of God chose a life
of pain and suffering - knowing full well that he would bear the
sins of the world on himself - and in this way Jesus truly is our
Immanuel - Not - God over us; God before us, or even God for
us; BUT - GOD WITH US - God with us in our suffering. God with
us in our forsakenness, God with us in the darkness, God with us
in betrayal and abandonment; There is something incredibly
consoling about someone who is with you; Who has walked in
your shoes, knows the same trials, troubles, pain and suffering
that you know… When Evelyn was diagnosed with her congenital
heart disease, more comfort than any of the Bible verses we
received were the number of people that reached out to us as a
resource because they also had kids with the same condition… it
brought us so much comfort - others have walked this path
before us and had come through it. Our suffering was real, but it
wasn’t unique. We weren’t alone.
1. In fact the verses that brought me so much comfort during
this time were these - “But now thus says the LORD, he
who created you, O Jacob, he who formed you, O Israel:
"Fear not, for I have redeemed you; I have called you by
name, you are mine. When you pass through the waters, I
will be with you; and through the rivers, they shall not
overwhelm you; when you walk through fire you shall not
be burned, and the flame shall not consume you.” - Isaiah
43:1-2
8. And even more so in Jesus? - as we often sing - “he has walked
this path before us, he is walking with us still.”
9. In the cross Jesus was identifying to the fullest extent with a
suffering humanity. Humanity has suffered immensely throughout
history: disease, disaster, injustice, cruelty, torture, murder,
heartbreak, death – history is a long tale of suffering and woe.
Jesus in His love chose to experience the full impact of what sin
had done to the human race. The cross testifies to the
immeasurable compassion and camaraderie of the Son of God
for suffering humanity!
1. English Poet George Herbert (1593-1633) wrote an incredible
poem called - The Sacrifice. In it stanza after stanza (62 in
total) he chronicles the various sufferings and affliction of the
life of Jesus - every one with the refrain - "Was ever grief like
mine?” It’s almost like Herbert is just stacking the deck - one
after another, after another.. whatever your pain is - Jesus
knows, whatever you’re suffering - Jesus knows - sin and
injustice done to you? Jesus knows - Therefore - Go to him,
seek his face when you feel alone, and overwhelmed in
suffering and pain - go to him.. Jesus Knows.. tell him your
sorrows!
3. Conclusion: But in closing - something we must remember - Jesus
isn’t just another victim of suffering - he didn’t just suffer with us but
Jesus suffers in order to end all sufferings.
1. Paul tells us that there on the cross God was working through Jesus
to reconcile all things to himself - all things. Through the work of
Jesus God has dealt the justice and judgment our sin deserves which is death - so now when God comes to restore all things (And
HE WILL) he can destroy all sin - without destroying us.
2. Jesus came and suffered for us in order to end our suffering. Your
suffering, your pain, my suffering, my pain, is not the end of our
story - In and through the work of Jesus God promises to fill up all
our emptiness, sooth all our pain and drown all our sorrows 3. “On this mountain the LORD Almighty will prepare a feast of
rich food for all peoples, a banquet of aged wine - the best
meats and the finest of wines. On this mountain he will destroy
the shroud that enfolds all peoples, the sheet that covers all
nations; He will swallow up death forever. The Sovereign LORD
will wipe away the tears from all faces; he will remove his
people’s disgrace from the earth. The LORD has spoken.” Isaiah 25:6-8
4. So even though we might feel that these trials and troubles are
defining us, and that our sufferings are more than we can bear -or
in Paul’s words - “We face death all day long - we are like sheep
to be slaughtered - the resounding response is NO - In all these
things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us.
For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels
nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers,
neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all of creation, will
be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ
Jesus our Lord.” - Romans 8:36-39
4. In the Gospel God offers us a suffering companion for the road of life
and a table of feasting and fulness at journeys end.