CBN.com  Where is God 
                during tragedies like the tsunami of 2004 in Asia or Hurricane 
                Katrina in the United States? Recent events have left many people 
                asking this question. In their new book, God is in the Hard 
                Stuff, authors Bruce Bickel and Stan Jantz show readers where 
                to turn when the going gets rough -- to the God who cares about 
                every difficulty they face. Based in the timeless truths of scripture, 
                drawing upon life experiences of people who've navigated the dark 
                valleys, God Is in the Hard Stuff offers inspiration 
                and hope. Read an excerpt below.
              Chapter Two: Innocent Suffering
              Of all the types of suffering
                we see in the world, the most difficult to understand is the
                suffering of the innocent—in particular, innocent children. 
                When the devastating tsunami of 2004 took scores of thousands 
                of lives, it was hard to comprehend the magnitude of such an enormous 
                loss.
                After a while, the images blurred together, leaving many of us 
                numb and unable to show emotion.
              Then, perhaps, you saw a photo of a father clutching the
                lifeless body of his child. You observed the child, but your eyes 
                fixed on the contorted face of the parent—and in an instant 
                a knot formed in your stomach. You hurt for this family and countless 
                others you will never know, but somehow identify with. You are 
                not related, yet you are connected by the common bond of humanity.
              You can’t help but feel a sense of helplessness when such
                disasters occur. Because they originate with this planet we call 
                home, we all feel the sting when the earth convulses. And we wonder: 
                Can we trust this life-giving sphere that is usually so good to 
                us? It all seems rather capricious, especially when those who 
                are least able to handle the terrestrial blast of earthquakes, 
                typhoons, and floods are often hit the hardest.
              How do we deal with this kind of suffering? What are our
                options? We can believe that nature has run amok and out of God’s 
                control. Or we can believe that nature is all there is, with no 
                God to care or wield any authoritative restraint. Those are the 
                options of people who have given up on God. They aren’t 
                very comforting, are they? If nature is the beginning and the 
                end of all things, and if we are merely pawns in a mindless game 
                of chance and natural selection (it’s survival of the fittest, 
                you know), there is no need to wonder why we suffer—because 
                there is no explanation.
              People who still hold to a belief in some kind of God—
                and most of the world operates this way—look beyond nature 
                for answers. Even in this realm of belief, there are multiple 
                views. One is that God is using nature to inflict punishment on 
                His wayward created beings. He did it once—remember the 
                Great Flood?—and He can do it again. Ah, but there’s 
                the rainbow, God’s promise to humankind that He will never 
                inflict such worldwide harm again:
              “I will never again curse the earth, destroying all 
                living
                things, even though people’s thoughts and actions are bent
                toward evil from childhood. As long as the earth remains,
                there will be springtime and harvest, cold and heat, winter
                and summer, day and night.” GENESIS 8:21–22
              We must look elsewhere for some kind of explanation, though
                none can be found to satisfy everyone. Perhaps a partial answer 
                is found in the New Testament. In his letter to the first-century 
                Roman church, the apostle Paul wrote:
              All creation anticipates the day when it will join God’s
                children in glorious freedom from death and decay. For
                we know that all creation has been groaning as in the
                pains of childbirth right up to the present time.
                ROMANS 8:21–22
                
                Even creation is under the weight of sin and suffering, brought
                into this world by rebellious acts of the people God made. It 
                isn’t that God has lost control; He is merely allowing His 
                creation to operate in the physical world He made for us, functioning 
                superbly and incredibly 99.9 percent of the time. Occasionally, 
                though, it groans from the contractions that will someday result 
                in a new heaven and a new earth.
              Meanwhile, we must also groan—with compassion—for 
                those
                affected by Earth’s sometimes unexplainable behavior. If 
                we are to find meaning in any of this, we should find it in the 
                help we can give to those who suffer.
               ...In The Hard Stuff
              
• People without God are people without hope.
                  • This world is an imperfect place, but it is the
                  best of all possible worlds.
                  • God has taken extraordinary measures to
                  provide a comfortable and beneficial place for
                  us to live.
                  • God does not cause suffering, but He allows
                  it to happen for reasons we don’t always
                  understand.
                  • Never allow your own comfort to keep you
                  from giving comfort to others.
              
              Read an article by the authors: Talking 
                to Your Children About the Hard Stuff in Life.
              
              Excerpted from God is in the Hard Stuff, by Bruce Bickel 
                & Stan Jantz, Copyright 2005. Published by Barbour Publishing. 
                Used by permission. Unauthorized duplication prohibited. 
                
              
              
               
              
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