August 16, 2024

Despite Suffering

1 Thessalonians 1:6 (KJV) And ye became followers of us, and of the Lord, having received the word in much affliction, with joy of the Holy Ghost:

Isn’t it wonderful that the salvation of a soul is not limited by circumstances, afflictions, and suffering? God can swoop in and change the spiritual condition of a soul from standing in opposition to Him to standing in spiritual agreement with Him. It is often true that a meeting with God comes in the most challenging times, not during fun, rest, and relaxation. Each person has a limit of what they can try to handle apart from God and has a different level for falling apart. This is why this verse speaks about much affliction, as typically, a person must come to the end of themselves before they can meet God.

Yes, despite the pain each child of God faces when they try to do things on their own, once they recognize God, seeing Him for the first time, all other things at work in their life dim in comparison to Him and the truth of His Word. Think of Saul actively searching out followers of God and seeking their harm and imprisonment instead of identifying the value God places on each person. Then, one day, God stops Paul on the road and causes him to drop to the ground upon meeting Him personally. God does not make his life easy once he knows the truth; instead, he changes his name to Paul and is with him through a myriad of troubling situations and even times of danger and near-death experiences as Paul chooses to live for God.

Just the same, each person experiences much affliction in their journey but has the joy of the Lord at work despite the hardships and trials they face as they walk with God and sojourn on this wicked earth for a time.

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  • theilleists@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    From my perspective, free will has only ever been an illusion, so it’s certainly possible to live life without it (everyone who ever existed did), and, without any trace of doubt, the preservation of this illusion is absolutely not a benefit which justifies the cost of suffering.

    But let’s pretend free will is magically real and the bible is literally true. The god of the bible could use their omnipotence to allow people to make whatever choices they wanted, but to prevent those choices from actually hurting anyone else. Free will does not equal free action. People cannot choose to fly. Therefore, more similar constraints on people’s actions could prevent suffering without eliminating free will. The omnipotent god chooses not to take this route. Therefore, god just has an aesthetic appreciation for suffering. I.e., god is into BDSM.

    • maxmoon@lemmy.worldOPM
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      4 months ago

      Being upset that God allows suffering and at the same time are upset that God doesn’t give wicked men God like power while at the same time restricting their choices to only be good choices? This doesn’t make a lick of sense. God is logical, just and loving; this combination does not allow for illogical conditions, such as preserving free will, while limiting choices to good ones.

      Something to think about, if God is real and protects your free will above all else, would not His enemy want to convince you that free will is an illusion?

      • theilleists@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        Predicated on the factually false hypothetical that the god of the bible were real, I would be upset that they allow suffering. I would not be upset that they don’t give people godlike power (where did you get those words you put in my mouth?). I would prefer that god restricted the consequences of people’s choices to prevent those choices from causing harm to others. If god is so enamored of free will, they could still allow free choices, but restrict the consequences of those choices. I.e., I can make the choice to breathe water. “Freely” choose it. But the consequence is that I will fail and die. That’s the kind of restriction we already live with. The kind you must believe to have been god’s choice. So god could choose to enact more similar restrictions on consequences while preserving free choice.

        No conscious entity convinced me that free will is not real. I trust the evidence of my eyes and ears, in combination with the experimental method. That’s something you are explicitly told not to do. If god were real, and they were a tyrannical psychopath, would they not want to convince you to trust them by faith instead of using your own common sense to judge their actions? Something to think about.