Day 34 – suffering and the laws of nature
If matter is to serve as a neutral field, it must have a fixed nature of its own. –C. S. LEWIS
Why does God seem so reluctant to tinker with the laws of nature? A closer look at these laws may give us a clue.
If matter is to serve as a neutral field, it must have a fixed nature of its own. –C. S. LEWIS
Why does God seem so reluctant to tinker with the laws of nature? A closer look at these laws may give us a clue.
Since God created the universe, He must be the One responsible for its laws. These serve a useful function by giving our universe a predictable and dependable side. They do not waver. We can always count on them to work for us. We trust them and rely on them every minute of every day. But this same predictability also makes it possible for them to cause suffering. The same gravity that holds us to the earth also causes a meteorite to fall from the sky and a boulder to tumble down a hill. If we so happen to be standing where the meteorite strikes or along the boulder’s path, the laws of nature virtually guarantee that pain and suffering will follow. In the same way, water is necessary for life, but if our lungs become immersed in it, we suffer death by drowning. Thus we see through these examples that nature is a double-edged sword. It has a firm, predictable, unyielding, stable side that literally makes life livable. And, as a function of its consistency, it has the power to do us harm. Fortunately, the instances that it acts in our favor far outnumber the times it causes us pain. This is what we would predict, given the fact that its primary function is to help us.
The laws of nature, then, are good for us. They give us a stable platform upon which to act out our lives. Perhaps this in part is why God would seldom circumvent them. The world would be a terrifying place if, for example, the law of gravity were waived to suit my or your fancy. The moment I suspend it may be the very moment you need it. It would be best for us if the law were left alone. God knows this better than we do. He put the laws of nature in the universe to level the playing field of life. He does not, for good reason, tamper with these laws very often.
Daily Quotation
C. S. Lewis, The Problem of Pain (New York: Macmillan, 1962), 31.
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