Home Pastors Articles for Pastors Why Is There So Much Pleasure in the World?

Why Is There So Much Pleasure in the World?

Ironically, these skeptics don’t account for the fact that physical pain is what protects us from harm, for instance when we come close to something too hot that would burn us.

(See my article What if God Eliminated all Suffering?) Without physical pain, I wonder if life could even continue to exist since it is the warning system that keeps us from destroying our bodies.

They also don’t consider the fact that human beings account for the majority of the suffering in the world, and to eliminate that would require eliminating human beings! 

The pastor deciding to live a year without God and turning to atheism is like a foolish child who decides that if his parents won’t give him everything he wants, he will run away from home.

You might be wondering, “But doesn’t suffering bother you Mark?” The answer is, “Yes, of course! It bothers me immensely, especially the suffering of those I love.”

Over the years, our family has experienced our share of suffering:

  • The death of my infant brother
  • Family members suffering for years with Alzheimer’s disease
  • A nephew killed in a motorcycle accident at age 20
  • Another nephew who committed suicide at age 27
  • A sister-in-law who died of cancer at 57
  • Other family members who suffered from mental illness
  • My wife, Carolyn, suffers from terrible migraines (and is in bed with one right now as I write)

I could go on with more of our sufferings, but you get the idea. And my list is probably not that different from most people’s list of sufferings.

Here’s the point—each of us has two options:

  1. We can say that life is ultimately meaningless because God would not allow suffering, therefore there must not be a God. OR,
  1. We can understand that suffering is not God’s original plan, that He loves us through our suffering and that the suffering of this life is very brief compared to the ecstasies of eternity with Him.

The Bible is very clear that this world was originally a paradise and that suffering came as a result of sin—disobedience to God. Suffering is NOT God’s optimal plan for this world. 

So now we wait for the restoration of that paradise—the new earth (Revelation 21:4).

Until that paradise comes to all who believe, Christians can take great comfort in the fact that God loves us, that He has a loving plan for our lives and that He is working “all things together for good!”