After many decades of defending God, I still keep coming face-to-face with sincere people of faith who maintain that God is the author of everything that happens, including evil. In a sermon I preached in 2004, I described the thought pattern I was hearing from fellow believers as follows:
God is sovereign. So everything that happens in this world happens by his design. When the tragedy is too horrific, it is conceded that maybe it wasn’t God’s idea, or his action, but since he is sovereign, he at least must have given permission for it to happen. And always Romans 8:28 is the clincher, “all things work together for good to them that love God.” Sometimes it is said that God is weaving a beautiful tapestry which we can only see from the bottom side with all its random strands of thread. Once we will get to see the tapestry from God’s point of view it will all make sense. On occasion it is suggested that the tragedy was fair punishment for an ungodly life. Or that God is, in the tragedy, testing you so you can know how strong you really are.
There is so much to say, and indeed books have been written on this subject. I will restrict myself to a few summary statements for those who are still blaming God for evil, followed by a lengthy quote from Brad Jersak.
To conclude, I quote Brad Jersak from a recent dialogue I had with him:
It seems to me that we suffer from these monster-God projections at a very deep and instinctual level. In part it goes back to the belief that God is the direct cause of every event…possibly as early as the first lighting strike observed by a hominoid! Fire from heaven; a gift or a curse, depending on if you were good or bad. Then, just as we captured fire, so we thought to capture God within the confines of our limited understanding. Perhaps it’s also a way to comfort: If God sent it, then it has a reason or purpose, rather than being a random and pointless tragedy; a trial to be passed, a lesson to be learned. But the cost of such ‘comfort’ becomes too high when the trial exceeds any possible explanation. Then we’re left broken and bitter at the god who ‘sent’ it.
“This fear has a counterpart: If God didn’t send it, then God sits by and does nothing. This too is tragic, for our Lord has fully participated in our humanity and united himself to us in our suffering. I would like that to mean that his solidarity with me magically removes the suffering, but that’s not the norm. The norm is that we pass through the trials with him. But it is so much more difficult to experience his presence as consolation if you think he sent the suffering and refuses to retract his heavy hand.
A lesson we all need to learn.