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When
Bad Things Happen
By J Michael Feazell
Just
as Jesus trusted himself to God in the miscarriage of justice that
resulted in his execution, so he stands with us, trusting God for us
in the course of our tragedies, injustices and disasters.
You’ve probably seen
this short prayer displayed on a wall, on a desk or on a plaque in a
gift shop. Every member of Alcoholics Anonymous knows it by heart:
GOD, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change,
Courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the
difference.
It’s a great prayer.
Perhaps our greatest plague is that of anxiety, that old fiend that
manifests itself in fear, worry, frustration, dread and the like. We
fear that we might be victimized by some disastrous turn of events. We
worry that things might turn out badly for us. We feel our frustration
levels rise when the world and the people in it do not conform to our
expectations. We dread the possible outcomes of a future that has
shown itself unreliable in its treatment of us.
But we Christians
believe that God makes a difference in our world of vulnerability. The
Serenity Prayer above draws our attention to the fact that there are
many things we cannot change. Bad things do happen to good people. We
can spend our time blaming ourselves or others, or we can learn to
trust our lives, with all the tragedies and all the triumphs, to Jesus
who loves us.
It’s not that Jesus
keeps bad things from happening. Sometimes I think he does—maybe even
oftentimes. But there are plenty of times that he doesn’t. It’s when
the bad things happen that we share in the sufferings that Jesus
suffered for us. And just as Jesus trusted himself to God in the
miscarriage of justice that resulted in his execution, so he stands
with us, trusting God for us in the course of our tragedies,
injustices and disasters.
Jesus trusts God for
us even when we are paralyzed with doubt. He’s our Intercessor even
when we are so hurt that we wish God would take his intercession,
stuff it and get out of our lives.
He’s our Intercessor
even when we put the blame on God for what we know he could have
stopped from happening, but didn’t. And he’s our Intercessor, full of
faith on our behalf, even when we are so scared and worried that we’ve
hardly thought of God in weeks.
Here’s what you may not have known about that little prayer I mentioned
earlier. It’s part of a longer prayer penned by the American
theologian, Reinhold Niebuhr. It goes like this:
GOD, grant me the
serenity to accept the things I cannot change, courage to change the
things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference. Living one day at
a time; enjoying one moment at a time; accepting hardship as the
pathway to peace. Taking, as he did, this sinful world as it is, not
as I would have it. Trusting that he will make all things right if I
surrender to his will; that I may be reasonably happy in this life,
and supremely happy with him forever in the next. Amen.
(Reinhold Niebuhr,
1926)
The idea of taking
this sinful world as it is, rather than how I would have it, is not
what I learned as a boy. I learned, like most little boys and girls,
to be good and hope for the best, and then feel betrayed, crushed and
either angry or depressed if something worse happened—worse meaning
anything I did not want.
But the world is not
designed to bend to our hopes and desires. Good things happen, but so
do bad things. They happened to Jesus, and they happen to us.
Bad things happened to
Paul, too, so bad that he tells us he “despaired of life” (2
Corinthians 1:8-10). But he passes on to us what he learned: When bad
things happen, it helps us learn not to rely on ourselves but on God
who raises the dead—the God who raised Jesus, our Intercessor.
The gospel is good
news. It calls us not to account, but to rest. The gospel is not about
the snowstorm of things we either should have done or should not have
done. It is about trusting God, about throwing all our cares on the
one who loves us, about resting in Jesus Christ. In him, we can indeed
accept what we cannot change, find the courage to change what we can,
and the wisdom to know the difference.
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