Christian Posture of the Problem of Evil in Life
Job 3:20
Why is light given to him that is in misery, and life to the bitter in soul;…


This question of universal, intellectual, and moral interest, as to the purpose of evil, is a question which has always been raised by ghastly facts in human life, parallel to Job's. Why wert thou so visited, didst thou ask, O Job? Why but that, through thy momentary temptation to wonder and murmur, that beautiful patience and admirable piety of thine might be afterwards developed, and that thou mightest thus set up on earth a school of patience and trust in God, where all the after generations of men might study? Even so we may answer this old "why and wherefore" in our own experience. To what do we owe all that is soft, beautiful, and gentle in this rough, cross world, but to just such instances as we deplore? Job's question, Why the light of human life is mixed with bitterness and misery, is answered then, in the demonstration that we are indebted for what is most valuable in temper, character, and hope, not alone to what is sunny and sweet, but to the shadow that hides our landscape, and the wormwood that dashes our cup. For the present let us not be anxious to know more.

(C. A. Barrel.)



Parallel Verses
KJV: Wherefore is light given to him that is in misery, and life unto the bitter in soul;

WEB: "Why is light given to him who is in misery, life to the bitter in soul,




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