There's Hope For Todayគំរូ

There's Hope For Today

ថ្ងៃទី 351 ក្នុងចំណោម 366 ថ្ងៃ

C. S. Lewis wrote The Problem With Pain in an attempt to provide an intellectual response to one of life’s great questions: why is there suffering? The question serves as a roadblock to faith for those who cannot reconcile a loving God with a suffering world. Lewis refuses to absent God from suffering. He finds God particularly close when darkness falls. I’m reading Lewis this morning as I am preparing for the burial of a young man who took his own life. There are no easy answers. Words never seem so anemic or inadequate than in that moment they reach to touch a grieving heart. Yet God is as active in sorrow as He is in our greatest joys. He gives us the gift of presence. He draws near. I think Lewis was partly right when he said, “God whispers to us in our pleasures, speaks in our conscience, but shouts in our pains: it is his megaphone to rouse a deaf world.” But God also knows how to be still, and let His presence bypass all regular means of communication. I have found the inner knowledge of His nearness to be more effective than whispers and words. I’m counting on that presence to help heal broken hearts at a funeral gathering this afternoon. His presence enfolds His power, and His power alone gives grace, help, hope, and peace.

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There's Hope For Today

"There's Hope for Today" is a year-long devotional that puts you in touch with the power and promise of Scripture every single day.

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