Why Does God Let Bad Things Happen to Good People?

By Pastor Mike Novotny

Continue Exploring Time of Grace

The video summary text below was produced with the assistance of AI. Please contact us to report any inaccuracies in the video summary text below.

Life often presents us with profound mysteries, and one of the deepest is why God allows bad things to happen to good people. It’s a question that touches the core of our faith and challenges our understanding of God’s nature. As believers, we may find ourselves grappling with this question when faced with personal suffering or witnessing the pain of others. Let’s explore some biblical insights that can guide us through this difficult terrain.

The Nature of God

The Bible paints a multi-faceted picture of God’s nature. It declares that God is all-knowing, all-powerful, and all-loving. If God knows about our suffering, has the power to prevent it, and loves us deeply, why doesn’t He intervene? This paradox is challenging to our human logic. However, the Bible consistently affirms these attributes of God, inviting us to trust in His character even when our circumstances seem to contradict it.

Understanding Through Scripture

The Bible does offer some broad explanations for why suffering exists, although it doesn’t provide specific answers for individual situations. In Isaiah, we learn that sometimes God spares the righteous from greater evils by taking them from this world. The story of Joseph in Genesis reveals how God can use suffering for a greater good, even when it’s not immediately apparent. Romans 8:28 assures us that God is working in all things for the good of those who love Him. These scriptures remind us that God’s perspective is eternal and often beyond our immediate understanding.

The Secret Things and the Revealed Things

Deuteronomy 29:29 offers a helpful framework for approaching the mysteries of suffering: “The secret things belong to the Lord our God, but the things revealed belong to us and to our children forever.” This verse reveals two categories: the secret things and the revealed things. While God has not disclosed every reason for our suffering, He has revealed His love and promises through His Word. Our focus should be on what God has revealed, not the mysteries He has chosen to keep hidden.

Trusting in God’s Love

In moments of deep suffering, the Bible calls us to trust in God’s revealed love, especially as demonstrated in Jesus Christ. Jesus’s own suffering and sacrifice on the cross is the ultimate testament to God’s love for us. The cross is where God’s power was restrained so that His grace could abound in forgiving our sins. When we fix our eyes on Jesus, we find the assurance we need to trust God, even when we don’t understand why He allows certain things to happen.

Finding Peace in Unanswered Questions

While we may not have answers to every question about suffering, we can find peace in what God has revealed. The love of Jesus, the forgiveness of sins, and the hope of eternal life are truths that belong to us. These revealed promises can calm our anxious hearts and strengthen our trust in God. Believing that God has a purpose for our pain, even if it remains unseen, requires faith. But this faith is grounded in the certainty of God’s love and the assurance that He is working for our ultimate good.

In our journey through life’s trials, we are invited to trust in God’s wisdom and love. While some questions may remain unanswered, the truths God has revealed are sufficient to sustain us. May we find comfort in the knowledge that the secret things belong to the Lord, and trust that His purposes, though hidden, are good.

Share:

About the Author

Pastor Mike Novotny

Pastor Mike Novotny has served God’s people in full-time ministry since 2007 in Madison and, most recently, at The CORE in Appleton, Wisconsin. He also serves as the lead speaker for Time of Grace, where he shares the good news about Jesus through television, print, and online platforms.

Related Posts

The lowest, hottest place in the United States is Death Valley National Park in California. At the lowest place in [...]

Biblical forgiveness is not like the express checkout at your local grocery store—maximum 15 items. Instead, God calls you to [...]

There’s this one verse in the Bible that a lot of people—myself included—seem to know (but don’t really know). It [...]

I interviewed a number of couples from my church that had been through and healed from an affair. I then [...]