Mystery – The Unresolved Category

Mystery – The Unresolved Category

Last week, I posed a troubling question: Does God care about our earthly woes? Or as author Brent Curtis wrote, are we trapped in a story that “uses up characters like trailer courts in tornado season?”

How can we know that God is good?

Let’s get down to the juggernaut of the question. We have legitimate questions about God’s goodness: Why tragedies? Why injustices? Why do innocents suffer—like children blasted with chlorine gas in Syria? Even small things can galvanize our doubts.

We say—if God will give us answers, then we’ll trust Him…

We want Him to come down with all His goodness and answer our questions with puzzle-like exactness. The puzzle would look like this:Continue reading

The Gamble

The Gamble

If you’ve been following my posts on Fyodor Dostoevsky, here is the final and perhaps the best one. Last week I challenged readers to read the famous chapter, “The Grand Inquisitor,” from Dostoevsky’s crowning achievement–an epic novel called, The Brothers Karamazov. It’s so remarkable that complete copies of the chapter are available online.

I wept, reading it again. I always do, even though it is a fantastical story in a fictional novel. Take a moment now in your busy week and ponder the deep questions in this famous piece of writing…

Imagine the wonder of Jesus returning to the earth. Not as promised in all His glory—yet. Rather, just to see what’s become of us in the interim, in the long lapse of time that started when He said, “Behold, I come quickly.”

The Seal for the Tribunal of the Spanish Inquisition

The Seal for the Tribunal of the Spanish Inquisition

The sub-story is set in Spain at the time of the Inquisition, a forceful suppression of religious freedom, punishable by death. Jesus came in ordinary clothes to the hot pavement of Seville, which on the day before, a hundred heretics had been burned by order of the Grand Inquisitor. Dostoevsky initially paints a beautiful scene…Continue reading