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Question My
cousin was murdered last month. He was working the late shift when someone came
in and stabbed him. I know G'd gives us the free will to commit evil,
but why does he let people murder other people? Answer
My
sympathies for the murder of your cousin. It is an unfathomable tragedy and I
share your grief.
Your question is a complex one, and the answer contains
many variables. I will present them all for you here. I hope that something I
have written helps to console you and your family.
First , we have to
clarify what question we're actually asking. When we say "Why do bad things
happen to good people," this can mean one of two things. If you listen to
the question carefully, it's assuming God's existence. People say: I know there's
a God, but I want to understand: Is this God good? And if he is good, then why
do bad things happen to good people?
Alternatively, the question "Why
do bad things happened to good people," may really be asking "I'm not
sure that God exists." That's a completely different question. The question
of God's existence has nothing to do with the issue of suffering. It has to do
with creation, revelation at Sinai, world history, etc. So we should be clear
that the question we are dealing with here is not "Does God exist?"
It's "Why do bad things happen to good people?"
* * *
THE GENERAL AND THE SPECIFIC
In order for us to be able to "judge
God," we have to be able to look at what are God's "ground rules"
for existence. Using this premise, it becomes very difficult to judge God. Why?
Because we are stuck in a finite perspective of time and space, and we can therefore
never be sure which rules God is employing at any given moment.
In discussing
this issue, we're not going to give an answer as to why particular things happen
in a particular situation. Only a prophet can do that and it's been a long time
since God spoke to me! What we can do is look at general approaches that Judaism
offers, to at least get a general sense of what the possibilities are for why
things happen.
Here's an analogy: A physicist can tell you why a leaf
will fall in a particular place - it has to do with the aerodynamics of the leaf,
the force of gravity, and the direction and velocity of the wind. But if you ask
that physicist where a certain leaf is going to fall, he is not going to be able
to tell you, because he can't precisely quantify the different forces that make
a leaf fall in a particular place. He can give you the general principles, but
he can't give you a precise analysis of a specific situation.
It's the
same idea here. We won't be able to say why specific things are happening in a
specific situation, but we will be able to speak about general principles that
can lead us to understand the workings of a good God.
* * *
CHOICE AND CONSEQUENCES
One crucial idea to get us started:
The Torah tells us: "God created man in His image, in the image of God He
created him" (Genesis 1:27). What does it mean that man was created in God's
image? Human beings are finite and corporal. So how are we created in God's image?
Obviously the "image of God" is dealing with the non- physical
part of us - the soul. Where do we get our drive for morality and meaning, our
drive to make a difference? That drive is from the soul which is in the "image
of God."
But there's more to it than that. Just as God has independent
choice, so too does each human being have independent moral choice. The image
of God means that we have the ability to choose.
Why is choice the essential
issue of what makes us special? Because if you think about it, life only becomes
meaningful because of our ability to choose. For example, the difference in being
"programmed to love" and the choice to love, is precisely what makes
love significant. Similarly, if I don't have the choice to do good, but am programmed
to do good, then there's nothing meaningful about it. Whereas if I have the ability
to do good or evil, then good becomes significant.
But it goes deeper
still. For choice to be authentic, there have to be consequences. If every time
I get in trouble, dad comes to bail me out, that's not really choice. Choice means
consequences. Think about it. All of history - whether in our personal lives or
from a global perspective - is based on the decisions that human beings have made
- and the consequences that flowed from that.
So now we can understand
that "image of God" means that God created beings who have the ability
to make decisions, and those decisions will create consequences that will make
this being a co-partner in the development of the world. This has many ramifications
as far as "why bad things happen to good people" and certainly you can
start seeing it already.
Now I think we're ready to examine eight ground
rules which Judaism spells out for how God interacts with the world.
* * *
GROUND RULE #1 - THE POSSIBILITY OF EVIL
For free choice
to operate, it's obvious that evil has to have the possibility of existing. If
every time someone chooses to do evil, God is going to interfere, then there's
no moral choice. If every time the gun is pointed, the turret points backwards,
after a few times you get the message. If you eat pork and get struck by lightning,
then you're not "morally choosing," you just see it doesn't work. It
simply becomes pragmatic not to do evil.
If the lives of the righteous
were obviously perfect, that too would destroy the possibility of choice. Pragmatically,
we'd figure it pays more to be righteous because look at the millions of bucks
that come my way! That's not choice. That's not becoming God-like.
A
world where a human being can create himself into a Moses, also carries the possibility
of a person creating himself into a Hitler.
Sometimes God does make a
miracle, but it is always in a way that is not obvious, that enables us to retain
free choice.
After the Exodus from Egypt when the Red Sea split, it was
obvious to everyone that God had performed a miracle. Yet the Torah tells us "that
a strong east wind blew all night" (Exodus 14:21). Why was there a strong
wind blowing? Because God had to leave open at least the possibility for someone
to say, "No, there was no miracle. It was a fluke of nature and the wind
split the sea."
In the recent Gulf War, 39 Scud Missiles rained
down on Israel and only one person was killed. What would it take for that to
happen? Guaranteed you would have told me it would take a miracle, but it happened
and we still have doubt.
* * *
GROUND RULE #2 - INTERVENTION
In Genesis 15:13, God tells Abraham, "Know that your descendents are
going to be enslaved in a land they don't know," which of course ends up
being Egypt. So the Jewish philosophers ask: "If God wanted the Jewish people
to be enslaved in Egypt, why did he punish the Egyptians?" Tough question!
Nachmanides explains: "All God said is that they would be enslaved.
He said nothing about torture and murder. God only said that he wanted a certain
something to happen, but the Egyptians took it beyond that."
Now
the question is, "Do the Jewish people deserve intervention or not?"
Different story.
In Deuteronomy, Moses says that the fate of people depends
on our relationship to God. The more we move closer to Him, the more He moves
closer to us. The more we move away from him, the more He does the same. The language
used is "God hides His face." And when that happens, this leaves us
open to the free will decisions of human beings. At times God does not intervene.
We have to appreciate that in the Holocaust, it was not God who built the
crematoriums, it was the Nazis. It is not God who is massacring Moslems in Bosnia,
it is the Serbs. Which of course raises the question: Why isn't God interfering?
But do you see the difference between "God doing this" and "why
is God not interfering?"
King David said, "God, I'd rather
have direct punishment from you than to fall into the hands of a human being."
Because that's dangerous stuff. Will you merit to have God intervene?
* * *
GROUND RULE #3 - ETERNITY
The question of "why do
bad things happen to good people" has a lot to do with how we look at existence.
The way we usually perceive things is like this: A "good life" means
that I make a comfortable living, I enjoy good health, and then I die peacefully
at age 80. That's a good life. Anything else is "bad."
In a
limited sense, that's true. But if we have a soul and there is such a thing as
eternity, then that changes the picture entirely. Eighty years in the face of
eternity is not such a big deal.
From Judaism's perspective, our eternal
soul is as real as our thumb. This is the world of doing, and the "world
to come" is where we experience the eternal reality of whatever we've become.
Do you think after being responsible for the torture and deaths of millions of
people, that Hitler could really "end it all" by just swallowing some
poison? No. Ultimate justice is found in another dimension.
But the concept
goes much deeper. From an eternal view, if the ultimate pleasure we're going after
is transcendence - the eternal relationship with the Almighty Himself, then who
would be luckier: Someone who lives an easy life with little connection to God,
or someone who is born handicapped, and despite the challenges, develops a connection
with God. Who would be "luckier" in terms of eternal existence? All
I'm trying to point out is that the rules of life start to look different from
the point of view of eternity, as opposed to just the 70 or 80 years we have on
earth.
* * *
GROUND RULE #4 - THE BIG PICTURE
I heard
a cute story I'd like to share. There once was a farmer who owned a horse. And
one day the horse ran away. All the people in the town came to console him because
of the loss. "Oh, I don't know," said the farmer, "maybe it's a
bad thing and maybe it's not."
A few days later, the horse returned
to the farm accompanied by 20 other horses. (Apparently he had found some wild
horses and made friends!) All the townspeople came to congratulate him: "Now
you have a stable full of horses!" "Oh, I don't know," said the
farmer, "maybe it's a good thing and maybe it's not."
A few
days later, the farmer's son was out riding one of the new horses. The horse got
wild and threw him off, breaking the son's leg. So all the people in town came
to console the farmer because of the accident. "Oh, I don't know," said
the farmer, "maybe it's a bad thing and maybe it's not."
A
few days later, the government declared war and instituted a draft of all able-bodied
young men. They came to the town and carted off hundreds of young men, except
for the farmer's son who had a broken leg. "Now I know," said the farmer,
"that it was a good thing my horse ran away."
The point of
this story is obvious. Life is a series of events, and until we've reached the
end of the series, it's hard to know exactly why things are happening. That's
one reason the Torah commands us to give respect to every elderly person - because
through the course of life experience, they have seen the jigsaw puzzle pieces
fall into place.
The Torah itself makes this point very clearly. Jacob
is raising the next generation of the Jewish people, bringing to the world the
message of Ethical Monotheism. And the key character in that picture is his son
Joseph, who is kidnapped by his own brothers and sent down to Egypt. Imagine you
would come to Jacob at that point in time and ask him about a good God. What's
he going to answer?
In Egypt, Joseph became Prime Minister, and when
a grave famine hits the entire world, Joseph is a unique position to rescue his
family.
When we look at the whole story in retrospect, everything that
happened to Joseph was for the good. It set into motion a chain of events where
he ended up saving and building the Jewish people.
It is interesting
that one of the weekly Torah portions, "Miketz," ends on a bad note,
and is then resolved at the beginning of the following week. Why didn't the Torah
simply extend "Miketz" a few verses and have it end good? Because the
Torah wants to communicate the lesson that we don't always see the whole picture.
Sometimes you have to wait to see how "things turn out good in end."
* * *
GROUND RULE #5 - OPPORTUNITY FOR GROWTH
Sometimes
what we perceive as punishment is really an opportunity for growth. In the story
of the "Binding of Isaac," the Torah says that "God tested Abraham."
The question is: Doesn't God know what Abraham is capable of? So who's the test
for? It can't be for God. It must be for Abraham.
What does it mean to
be tested? You have potential. Now the question is can you actualize your potential?
We grow when we have to extend ourselves. The Hebrew word for test - "Nisa,"
is the same as one of the Hebrew words for flag - "Nes." What's the
connection? You hoist a flag; so too through being tested, we become hoisted to
higher and higher levels. Was this test a "punishment" for Abraham?
Of course not. It was an opportunity for growth. The Abraham before the test is
not the same Abraham after the test.
Imagine a track coach training an
athlete in the 110- meter high hurdles. The coach would start with the hurdles
low, and then raise them steadily as the athlete progressed. Raising the hurdles
is not a punishment; rather it shows the coach's increasing confidence in the
athlete's ability.
As a rabbi, I hear this over and over again: "When
this event happened in my life, it seemed so negative; now I understand why it
was there and how I grew from it.
Three years ago, a very dynamic woman
I know almost died. Her heart stopped on the table. She tells me it was the best
thing that ever happened to her. "I was in overdrive, running and doing.
That event got me to think: What's it all about?" And what this woman has
accomplished in the last few years in personal growth is unbelievable. She's convinced
that her suffering was integral to the growth process.
In Judaism, we
look at life as "I'm here for growth, so how does this situation help me
to change and grow?" When God is telling you to sacrifice your only son,
can there be any greater punishment? Yet it changed the whole future of the Jewish
people. "Tests" can change your future, too.
* * *
GROUND RULE #6 - BORN TO SUFFER
The Talmud (Yoma 35) tells the famous
story of the sage Hillel. At the time, the head of the yeshiva wanted to make
sure that the people who came to study Torah wanted it for the right reasons,
and not for self-aggrandizement. So in order to test people's motivation, he charged
money to enter the yeshiva.
Hillel was as poor and impoverished as they
come. In the winter, he wanted so much to study that he climbed up to the roof
by the skylight, and then became so enraptured with his studies that he didn't
realize he'd become frozen in. The next morning it was dark in the study hall.
So they looked up and saw a person's body. They brought him down and thawed him
out.
The Talmud states: "Hillel obligates the poor." That means
that Hillel takes away the excuse that we didn't accomplish what we were supposed
to in life due to lack of money. Hillel serves as a beacon that even in poverty,
one can still become the greatest of the great (which Hillel was).
Was
Hillel punished or was this his reason for being here? The Talmud tells us this
was his reason for being here. You don't know why a particular situation might
be happening. We each have our own package. Each one of us is put here for a particular
purpose. Sometimes "suffering" may actually be the reason we were put
here. Maybe this is, so to speak, our glory, our unique contribution.
* * *
GROUND RULE #7 - INDIVIDUAL & COMMUNITY
We are living
in a very complex world and in a complex world, God doesn't only deal with individuals,
he also deals with nations.
When God decided to destroy Sodom and Gomorra,
Abraham complained. He asked God, "If I can find 50 righteous people in Sodom
and Gomorra, will you spare the cities?" God said, "No problem, I won't
destroy it." Abraham bargained with God until he got down to 10 righteous
people and God said, "Okay, if you can find 10 righteous people I won't destroy
it."
Why did Abraham stop at 10? Why didn't he go down to one?
Because Abraham knew if there's a group of people who are righteous, then
society might turn around - you can't destroy them. Ten is still a group, under
10 is just individuals. A few righteous individuals is not enough to save Sodom
and Gomorra.
Another question: Now that God decided to destroy it, do
these righteous individuals merit to be spared themselves? The answer is that
while these individuals were not the catalyst for the disaster, but now that the
disaster is going to happen, you need a tremendous amount of merit to be saved
from it in a miraculous way. God deals both on a national realm and on an individual
realm. And that complicates our understanding of the equation.
* * *
GROUND RULE #8 - THE BENEFITS OF PUNISHMENT
Unfortunately, the way
a lot of Jews relate to punishment has been very heavily influenced by Christianity,
which is that God is always ready to get me with "fire and brimstone."
No offense, but the Jewish idea is much different. God is our merciful Father.
He's an infinite being that has no needs. Punishment cannot mean that He's "getting
something." And this is the key to understanding the concept of chastisement.
When you think about it, all relationships are based on reward and punishment.
When I bring my wife flowers, she smiles. If it's her birthday and I don't bring
her flowers, I get punished, either by a burnt dinner, cold shoulder, etc. Relationships
that are based on love always play themselves out in terms of reward and punishment.
When I do what's right, I receive positive reinforcement, when I do what's wrong
I receive "punishment."
What happens if my wife would always
react the same regardless of whether or not I bring her flowers? That's the worst
possible thing in a relationship - indifference.
Judaism says that punishment
exists because God is reacting to the fact that I've done something wrong and
He wants me to change. Hopefully I'll hear the message and learn from that. God
is not out for revenge. He's doing this for my own good. If He wouldn't react
to my negative behavior that would be the worst punishment of all - because that
would mean indifference. This is why King David says in Psalms (23:4): "Your
rod and your staff comfort me." Even though I may get "hit" once
in a while, I know it is ultimately for my own good.
* * *
PUTTING
IT ALL TOGETHER
Remember our original premise? That it is very difficult
for us to "judge" God because we are stuck in time and space. And because
our view is so limited, we are therefore limited in terms of knowing which ground
rules God is employing. When "bad" things happen, there are so many
possibilities of why it's happening. "Is this a challenge in life that was
given to me so I could become an example to inspire others? Or is this to get
me to fix a wrong I've done? Or is this due to historical/national forces that
are affecting me as an individual? Or is what's happening to me now through a
choice that I've made? Or that I'm on my own because I've distanced myself?"
The fact that there are so many possibilities makes it easier to come to
terms with the question, to be more comfortable realizing that if I had God's
infinite view I would understand.
In Exodus 33:13, Moses asks God, "Make
Your ways known to me." The commentators explain that there are "50
Gates of Wisdom," and Moses had reached the 49th Gate. This means that only
one aspect of existence was still unknown to him. And which was that? The issue
of "why bad things happen to good people." So what was God's answer?
"I'm sorry, but this is the one thing that no human can ever comprehend."
(see Exodus 33:20)
* * *
ATTITUDE
I've seen so much
suffering, and it seems to me that the key is "attitude." How people
deal with it depends on what attitude they have. I have seen people whose attitude
was of anger or hurt to such an extent that they never got beyond a particular
event - which then became the defining moment of their lives. In a certain sense,
life stopped at that particular moment.
On the other hand, I have seen
people who have gone through the most horrendous things, but their attitude was
a positive one of believing that there is an ultimate good, of asking how I can
learn and grow from this. It was incredible to see their sense of dignity, and
the inspiration they gave to others. How they moved on with their lives. The contrast
is so unbelievable between these two attitudes. Living with the concept of a good
God is so much more uplifting and gives a person the ability to remain joyful
and hopeful and have the strength to go on and fight.
Some people that
have suffered similar tragedies have found some degree of solace by setting up
some time of a fund or organization to help people, in memory of the departed
one. This enables them to channel some of the great emotion that have into an
area that offers them some degree of comfort.
I want to share a story
that I heard from a friend who experienced the following incident. If you've ever
ridden a bus in Israel, you know how people enter the bus from the front door
and pay the driver, and people exiting the bus do so from the back door. Sometimes
the crowd is so great that people will also enter from the back door, and then
pass their money up front to pay the driver. Well, this one time the driver decided
he wasn't going to allow that. So he announced that whoever had entered from the
back door, must now get off the bus and walk around to the front. Everybody complied
grumpily, except for one very old man who could barely walk in the first place.
Well, the driver stuck to his guns and announced that the bus would not move until
this old man came on through the front door. So slowly slowly, one small step
at a time, the old man got off the bus and walked around. And all the while, the
people on the bus were shouting at the driver for not only his insensitivity to
the old man, but for wasting everyone else's time!
Finally, the old man
managed to make it up through the front door and pay the driver. And then he turned
toward the bus full of angry people and told them: "Please, don't be upset.
We should be grateful that my legs still work and I still have the strength to
walk. Thank God!!"
I want to conclude with the following poem I
once read:
I asked for strength and
God gave me difficulties to make
me strong.
I asked for wisdom and
God gave me problems to solve.
I asked for prosperity and
God gave me brawn and brain to work.
I asked for courage and
God gave me dangers to overcome.
I asked
for love and
God gave me troubled people to help...
My prayers were
answered.
Rabbi Shraga Simmons
Aish.com
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