God
In Control Of Everything And
Everything Happens For A Reason?
Chapter 24
Now we shall cover another topic. We commonly hear that if something tragic happens or things are not going just right, that it all “happens for a reason.”
There may be some of you who disagree, but I find it an unfortunate choice of words when people try to console themselves when something disastrous happens in their lives or in the lives of others by saying, “Everything happens for a reason.” In your heart of hearts, do you really believe this?
People think everything that happens in their life, down to the minutest details, is all in God’s will. They are taught such phrases as “It’s God’s will,” or “Everything happens for a reason,” or “God is in control.” Such phrases seem to be used as a pain reliever, a narcotic, if you will, in order to try to ease the pain of human suffering.
There was an actor whose son was shot and killed. People tried to console him concerning the death of his son. He said, “Some have come to me and said it was God’s will. My answer to them is that I choose not to consider God carrying out his will with a bullet to my son’s head.”
Seriously think about it. If someone were to harm your child or any of your loved ones, could you honestly say it was “God’s will” and that “everything happens for a reason?” And please tell me, what kind of reason would God have? Just about everyone knows there is a reason, but no one can tell what that reason is! It is always a mystery. In the meantime, there are many who go through years of struggle and guilt. They struggle because they just cannot comprehend why God would allow such a thing to happen in their life, and have guilt because they have become angry with God. This has affected many people so tremendously that they have walked away from God angry and confused.
I will
give another example. I was listening to the news today where there
was a fatal accident that happened in Texas. Six people (ages 61 to
70) were just coming back from a three-day retreat in a small church
bus when they were suddenly hit by a man driving a truck. He admitted
he was texting while driving. They interviewed the pastor who said,
“We don’t know why God allowed this to happen. But one thing I do
know, God has a perfect plan.” And what is that perfect plan? All I
could do was shake my head. Is God really responsible because he
allowed people to get killed? Was this God’s perfect
plan? I will tell you what happened and God had nothing to do
with it. The accident happened because the man was texting while
driving. It was because of his negligence that people were killed.
The actual meaning behind the mask of Calvinism theology
of “everything happens for a reason,” is that God “intends
for everything to happen that happens.” Is this true? If God
intends for everything to happen that happens, then why do we see the
God of the bible intervening in people’s lives if everything was
planned out to the minutest detail? What would be the purpose for the
times He has changed His mind? Furthermore, if God intends for
everything to happen that happens, then there is no escaping the fact
that this is accusing God of being behind all the evil that takes
place in this world!
When someone says, “Everything happens
for a reason,” or “It’s God’s will and perfect plan,” they
are only repeating Calvinistic theology and not bible truth.
I
knew a woman some time ago who lost her husband and someone tried to
tell her this was God’s will and He decided to take him. All it did
was set a deep hatred in her towards God for taking her husband, even
up until the day she died in the nursing home.
Who is to Blame?
I was reading where someone was having a hard time forgiving someone because of some tragic event in her life. Though forgiving may be a very difficult thing to do, we must forgive just the same. If we do not forgive, God will not forgive us as recorded in the scriptures. Nevertheless, I could understand where she was coming from since all of us are no stranger to the teaching that everything happens for a reason and all is God’s will. I had fallen for the same deception.
I want to share something very personal that happened in my life and hope that those who are struggling with something similar and find it hard to forgive, will take heart and encouragement as I have received. There is a scripture I love which says:
Blessed is the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies and God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our troubles so that we may be able to comfort those experiencing any trouble with the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by God. (2Cor. 1:3-4)
Many
are in so much confusion because of the teaching that everything that
happens to us is God’s will. I struggled with this for so long. I
hope as you read my testimony that you would know God can do the same
for you. If you are struggling with tragic incidents that may have
happened in your life through no fault of your own, and having to
forgive someone who has hurt you deeply, just know that there is no
reason to hold anger towards God our Father. I want to share with you
the same comfort I have received. To God be the glory.
As
a young child, before my teen years, I was betrayed and humiliated
over a period of time by a Catholic priest and a relative. Yes, I am
talking about sexual abuse. It affects a person emotionally,
physically, relationally and spiritually. Those who have been abused
know what it means to suffer silently and how shame, depression, and
guilt become our constant companion. I tried to commit suicide on two
different occasions because the pain was so unbearable.
Then
I had become a Christian. It was a time of great joy for a couple of
years, that is until it was drilled into my head that God is in
control of everything and what happened to me was no mistake. I was
finding this hard to reconcile and started dwelling on my past all
over again. Once again, it brought me into a deep depression. I used
to have a saying and that was, "I have to climb up just to reach
the bottom." But the problem was that I could never reach the
bottom. I could not get out of this depression, and just the thought
that God was ultimately responsible for what happened to me made it
worse! Again, suicide went through my mind because the pain was once
again unbearable. But I knew in my heart this was wrong. It was not
an option. I continued to be depressed as my anger towards God grew.
For the first time in my life, I finally confided in a sister. She
listened and suggested I see a certain Christian sister who happened
to be a counselor. She encouraged me to talk with her. It took
everything for me to visit this woman because if there were one thing
I did not want to do, it was to discuss what happened to me again.
But as I slowly walked towards her door, I knew this is why I was
here. My feet seemed to drag and I felt as if I were outside my body.
I was just numb at this point.
As she sat closely in
front of me, she got me to explain my past. I did, and after all was
said and done, I only had one thing that bugged me and a question I
REALLY wanted to be answered. After I finished I looked at her,
sobbing like an idiot, and asked, "WHY DID GOD ALLOW THIS TO
HAPPEN TO ME?" To me, that was the cruelest thing for God to let
happen. She looked at me for a moment and said, "Sandy, God did
not allow this to happen to you. What I mean is," and I will
never forget what she said next, "God gave every person a free
will. Those men chose to do that to you, not God. Don't you think God
was grieving every time He saw you being abused? Don't you think He
was crying when you were crying? Don’t you think God was hurting
because you were hurting?" If I were sobbing before, I was
uncontrollably crying now. My heart sank to the floor because at that
moment I knew in my heart of hearts that she was telling me the
truth. I also realized how I had accused God unfairly and how could
He ever forgive me?
I do not remember much after that, but
I will tell you this, it was a great relief to realize God was not
responsible. I realized at that moment that God wishes no harm on His
children, and it grieves and angers Him to see innocent children
suffer at the hands of evil men. It was a relief to know that God did
give man a free will and He was not responsible for their evil acts,
and to realize that God loved me all this time and did not wish me
any harm.
It was not long afterward when I realized that
I now had to deal with forgiving my abusers. They were guilty of
criminal acts, and forgiving them seemed it would only reduce the
significance of their crime because in my mind they should be
punished. What I was doing was harboring unforgiveness, and God the
Father was not going to let me get away with this.
One
night, in my living room alone, I was reading my bible. I came to the
part where Jesus said how we must forgive others from our heart or we
will not be forgiven by God. I did not want that to happen, God not
forgiving me. I struggled hard that night with those verses. I had
every reason to be angry and wanting nothing more than vengeance. I
tossed and turned and finally went to sleep. The next morning I got
ready for work, but the thoughts, pain, and anger from my past did
not go away, neither did the verses I read the night before. I knew
what I had to do, but was just not sure how to do it. As I was
walking to work, I said this short prayer: "Lord, I know what I
read last night and you know I do not feel
like
forgiving these people, but you said I must and I know that is what I
have to do. So I forgive them by faith, please supply the emotions."
Within no time, I cannot begin to tell you the weight that came off
my shoulders. It was the difference between night and day! It was
refreshing. Oh yes, there were moments when those memories would pop
back in my mind from time to time, but I would also remember that
great moment when God lifted the burden and pain when I had forgiven
them that morning in prayer.
I pray that if anyone reading
this finds that they are in the same situation of being hurt and
trying to forgive, please take it to God in prayer. He will show the
way and lift that burden.
Now here are some quotes from
Reformed Theology (Calvinism) that is rampant in and out of
Christianity and the reason why we get the idea that God is behind
all the evil in the world:
God is seen as the great and mighty King who has appointed the course of nature and who directs the course of history even down to its minutest details.
He also
perfectly controls all the depraved and impious affections of the
wicked, and turns them as He pleases.
When we get the larger
view we see that even the sinful acts of men have their place in the
divine plan.
If “everything happens for reason,” as most people believe, then why should there be complaining when someone does something vicious to us or someone else? If people are adamant about what they believe to be true, why get upset when we see vile crimes committed such as abortions, rape of children, murderers killing people, women forced at gunpoint and repeatedly and brutally raped, an innocent person viciously beaten to death, and other such despicable crimes? After all, according to Calvinism, the criminals had no choice! They had no freewill! Why? Because the god of Reformed Theology “controls all the depraved and impious affections of the wicked, and turns them as He pleases.” “…even the sinful acts of men have their place in the divine plan.” In my opinion, the god of Calvinism is a god that is sadistic!
Are you
beginning to see the implications of this repeated rhetoric? God does
not choose evil to befall you, me, or anyone else. The evil actions
committed is man’s choice. God is not capable of perpetrating evil.
God did not create evil. I know some will immediately point out Isa.
45:7 in the King James Bible but look and compare the context
carefully because it has nothing to do with “moral evil” or sin,
but rather with “calamity” or “disaster”.
There is good
news! Though people will make wrong or evil choices that affect our
lives, we are told:
And
we know that for those who love God all things work together for
good, for those who are called according to his purpose. (Rom. 8:28)
This
tells me that God can use circumstances for our own good if we allow
Him. God can heal physical, emotional, and relational wounds. A
classic example of this is the story of Joseph who was sold into
slavery by his brothers (Gen. 37). At the end of that story, God
brought healing and reconciliation and much more. What the brothers
conceived and imagined to harm Joseph, God was able to use the
circumstances in Joseph’s life for good. Joseph did not moan, “Oh,
well, this is God’s will and everything happens for a reason.”
What Joseph did see was that God was powerful and loving enough to
use his circumstance to bring about good (Gen. 50:20).
That
‘God is in control,’ does not exist anywhere in the scriptures.
Throughout scriptures we can observe where God intervenes in the
world. If God were in control, then He would not have to intervene!
However, the bible does show that God is selectively
involved in
the affairs of the world, but not totally. I would say that God is in
control, but with the clarification that there is nothing beyond His
ability to intervene. God has all authority and power and can do
whatever He pleases. But it is wrong to say “God is in control”
if a person means by that statement that God is controlling every
little detail in this world as Calvinists would explain, then in that
sense, God is not in control. We could say, “God is in charge” to
cause less confusion. If God were in control, Jesus’ prayers would
have been meaningless.
Furthermore,
there are things happening this very moment that grieves God’s
heart. Why would God want to control to the point that it grieves His
own heart? If God is in control of everything then we cannot be
blamed for His sorrows. We can easily sit back and blame God for
making His life and ours miserable. He must take full responsibility
for everything.
Have
you ever heard the question, ‘If God is in control, why is there so
much suffering in the world?” The world scoffs at the answers given
by those who hold to Reformed Theology because it just does not make
sense. Unfortunately, I did not see the nonsense and fell for some of
its teachings, as many others. Why? Because those who start going to
church are slowly
indoctrinated
to
the point that they are eventually hooked to the falsehood no matter
how unreasonable it sounds at first. Teachers and preachers pull many
passages of scripture out of context and we think it is the truth,
that is, until it does not make sense in our own life and we truly
begin to ask questions. Regrettably, there are others who do not
bother to question, which leads some to the point of resentment and
they turn away from God (as I shared about the woman who lost her
husband) because they assume the teaching is true.
Why is there so much pain and suffering? Simple. Because man
has freewill. God gives us the ability to make choices, which can
have positive or undesirable effects on our fellow human beings and
ourselves. Of course Calvinists do not believe man has freewill and
it will take about three-hundred pages for them to explain why.
God
does not have total control, not because He does not have the ability
or power, but because He chooses not to exercise that power in all
situations. God can
intervene and
does influence this world through responses to our prayers. If it
were not so, Jesus wasted his time praying to his Father and so do
we.
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, among other biblical
characters, understood God was not in control, but they did know God
was “in charge” and therefore had no problems approaching God
with prayers, tears, requests, and praise.
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