| Dear Rev. Know-It-All,
A good friend of mine at work is a very
faith-filled Catholic with a healthy desire to better understand why God
allows disease. Her toddler son was recently diagnosed with a rare disorder
which could seriously affect him cognitively. It's a genetic disorder that
no one was aware of even existing in the family. She has surrendered the
problem over to God, and realizes that this is an opportunity to grow closer
and more dependent on God, yet questions why disease exists at all and
whether or not God actually 'gives' someone a disease.
Thank you,
Ms. Ari Bell

Dear Ari,
You have asked THE
question. First of all, let me tell you from the start that God does not
give anyone a disease. If the Catholic Church believed that God caused
disease we would have to close all those Catholic hospitals and stop trying
to cure the sick. Lourdes, as well as other healing shrines would have
to be shuttered as being the work of the devil. We Catholics believe in
healing, both supernatural and natural. If God caused disease, curing the
sick in any way would be resisting His perfect will. We believe that death
and sickness entered the world because of the sin of Adam and Eve.
This simple answer doesn’t help at all,
does it! It just brings up two more questions. First of all, why do I suffer
for the sin of two ancient people, if they existed at all? Second, if God
is all powerful and all loving, couldn’t He just wave His almighty hand
and make life better? These are two really good points. It’s easy
to say that God doesn’t will sickness and suffering, but if He is all
powerful, then He at least allows bad things to happen. If we are correct
about God, then it is fair to say that nothing in all the universe
happens, except with His permission. So, isn’t it fair to say that He
is to blame for everything from the Holocaust down to the common cold?
Why not blame Adam and Eve or some other poor cave men for the current
mess, or for my personal suffering?
Lots of great religious thinkers have come
up with lots of creative answers to the question of “if God is so good,
why is it that my life, and that of so many others whom I love, is, at
times, so lousy?” Let’s call it the “Good God/Lousy Life” problem.
(Or GGLL, for short.)
Jean Calvin 1509-1564, of France
and Switzerland, the lawyer who founded Reformed Protestantism and inadvertently
the United States, said that your life was lousy because you deserve it.
God created two groups of people, the elect, chosen to show His mercy
and the damned, chosen to show His justice.
And you, poor, blighted sucker, are probably
among the damned, as are most human beings, so it’s only going to get
worse and don’t think it’s unfair, because after all, God is God and
He can do whatever He darn well pleases and He decided to make you a miserable
sinner, just like Adam and Eve and if you think it’s bad now you’re
going to Hell so what you’re current suffering is a picnic by comparison
and who are you to criticize God anyway, you sniveling little worm. Amen.
Then there’s Rabbi Harold Kushner (1935
— ), his son died at the age of 14 of progeria, a rare hereditary disease.
His answer is that God...is not perfect. (See page 148 of his best selling
book “When Bad Things Happen to Good People.”) In other words, God
is not all powerful and He can’t make everything all right, no matter
how hard He tries, and believe me He’s really trying. Rabbi Kushner
seems to answer the question by making us feel sorry for God who’s doing
His level best at a job He’s not really cut out for.
Then there’s Carl Sagan 1934-1996 American
agnostic and astronomer. Let us pretend that he stands for the great number
of those who believe, practically speaking, that there is no God as most
people understand God to be. In a 1996 interview with NPR's Fresh Air,
Sagan said, "I find that you learn absolutely nothing about someone's belief
if you ask them 'Do you believe in God?' and they say yes or no. You have
to specify which of the countless kinds of God you have in mind." This
is very much to the point. God is defined as that reality, greater than
which nothing exists. As far as Carl knew, and he may be of a different
opinion now that he is dead, the universe with its “billions and billions
of galaxies spinning endlessly....” was in fact that greatest reality
which existed. It is, therefore God, and the Universe does not give a good
gosh darn whether you and yours are living happily ever after.
The Catholic Church has a different answer
from Carl, Calvin and Kushner. First of all, we Catholics agree that God
can do whatever He pleases and the beauty and order of the Universe are
what He pleased. Creation itself is an out flowing and mirror of God’s
perfection, imperfect, though it is. God is not arbitrary, as Calvin would
have us believe. Physical, natural and moral law flow from God’s very
nature. In the words of Einstein, a rather smart fellow, “God does not
play dice with the Universe!” (Actually Einstein said that “He (God)
does not throw dice.”) God does not contradict His own nature.
God’s sovereignty doesn’t mean that
He will cast you down to the deepest hell because, well, He just felt like
it. Calvin might do you such a thing, but God doesn’t. And different
from Dr. Sagan’s opinion, God is not impassive and uncaring. Carl Sagan
may have been. I don’t know, but the first Pope, St. Peter advised us
“to cast all our anxieties on Him, for He cares for you.” (1Peter 5:7)
How can He be all-caring, all-powerful,
all-knowing and I’m still a mess? My answer, which I hope is the Catholic
answer, would be a question: Have you looked at a crucifix lately?
If you go into a Catholic Church, at least one where the pastor is paying
attention, there is a crucifix. There is a modern, though beautiful church
in Skokie, Illinois. It shines with beautiful stained glass windows, stained
glass, mind you, not painted. The light filters through the western, stained
glass wall at sunset like a vision. In front of that western wall is a
huge crucifix, perhaps thirty feet tall. If you sat for an afternoon looking
at that wonderful cross, you would gradually see the cross almost disappear
in an explosion of light. It would take an afternoon, but you would have
your answer.
I have heard nouveau, pseudo, deep as a
puddle, progressives criticize the old custom of the crucifix on the altar.
I remember an old German who was made pastor of a progressive parish. He
put a large Crucifix up in the rectory dining room. Two of the ministresses
of care were horrified by the change. “How dare he put that symbol of
violence and repression up in our dining room!?! It’s repulsive!”
It had a very salutary effect. The old pastor lost a little weight and
the two ministresses stopped bothering him at mealtimes.
You’ve probably been asked, “Why does
the Catholic Church have crucifixes and not just a simple cross? After
all, Jesus rose from the dead!” You forget that when He rose He
still had the nail marks in His hands and the wound in His side. He carried
the Cross with Him even in the Resurrection. If you look closely at the
Gospel of John, when Jesus talks about the hour of His glory, He is talking
about the crucifixion, not the Resurrection, though you can’t have one
without the other.
We want life to be easy. God wants life
to be beautiful. We want God to do things for us. God wants to make us
His children, sharing His nature. And what is His nature? Love. Real Love.
Sacrificial Love, not just sentiment. Jesus said, “Be perfect as
your heavenly Father is perfect.” (Matthew 5:48) We think of perfection
as flawlessness. A perfect person is beautiful, brilliant, rich and so
on. Remember the command is not be perfect. It is be perfect “AS” your
heavenly Father is perfect. “AS” is one of the most important words
in the Bible. “Peace I give you, not “AS” the world gives peace.”
“Love one another “AS” I have loved you,” not “AS” seen on
TV.” Love is easy if you define it the way a TV producer does, raging
hormones and no problem that can’t be solved in half an hour. Love one
another “AS” I have loved you involves nails, a cross and a crown of
thorns. God is love, and love is the goal, but remember that love
is defined by the cross.
I had a friend years ago, a real mensch.
He was smart, handsome, from a good family, well educated and well to do,
a promising career a gorgeous, loving wife two children and they actually
went to church. A charmed life. He called me one day in a state of confusion.
All I could do was listen. He and his wife had been informed that their
soon to be born child had Down’s Syndrome. She would be as some say “mentally
retarded.” The perfect life was over. He didn’t know what to do. The
doctors urged him and his wife to end the pregnancy. After all, it would
be more merciful to the “fetus.” Because they were Catholics,
they decided to allow the baby to live. Shortly before the birth he called
and said he did not know how they would be able to go on. About three years
later he called me and said that he hadn’t known that there could be
so much love as his littlest daughter had given him and taught him. What
had been his greatest fear had become his greatest blessing. The perfection
of God is more than His omnipotence or perfect knowledge. It is His unlimited
love.
That little girl was tiny and weak. She
wasn’t the greatest thinker ever born, but when she loves she is the
very reflection of the nature of God, and when we love, really love, love
sacrificially, so are we. She is perfect, not AS the world would have her
be. The world would have killed her, but God gave her to my friend as an
opportunity for true love. All of us get sick and all of us die. It is
the inheritance that we receive from our first parents. In the first garden,
they were offered a gift of love, sacrificial love, and all they had to
do was sacrifice the fruit of a tree. They could not trust God even that
far. Our inheritance is not just their failure, it is the question they
were asked by God and that God still asks of every human being, “Will
you trust Me?” Jesus was asked the same question in a different garden.
Gethsemane by name. “Will you trust Me,” asked His heavenly Father.
He answered, “Father, not as I will, but as You will.” He took what
had been stolen from that other tree and placed it back on the Cross, the
tree of life and so by His complete trust he gave love back to the world.
So, disease exists for the same reason
that the tree of the knowledge of good and evil existed in the garden of
Eden, for the same reason that the cross stood on Calvary’s hill. It
is the reason for imperfection in the midst of our yearning for perfection.
In the end, love will win. The tears that glisten on a mother’s cheek
will not disappear “they shall all be changed, in a moment, in the twinkling
of an eye,” (1Cor.15:52) They will shine like gold and diamonds
in an infinity of love.
Tell your friend that I will be praying
for her and the child she loves so much.
Rev. Know-It-All

The
Question Was
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Why would God
allow disease? |
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