Other Articles on
God's Tears
God's
Tears
And
God Cried
Introduction
Ch.
1 - And God Cried
Ch. 2 - Many Feel God Is Unjust
Ch. 3 - Why Does God Permit Evil?
Ch. 4 - Another Look At Sin
Ch. 5 - A Suffering Savior and Suffering
Christians
Ch. 6 - God Is Not Trying to Convert the
World Now
Ch. 7 - God's Kingdom
Ch. 8 - Supposed Objections
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And God Cried
Chapter 1
"Let my eyes run with
tears,
day and night let them not cease,
for my hapless people
have suffered a grievous injury,
a very painful wound."
Jeremiah 14:17 (JPS)
PRE-FLOOD (2850-2270 BC). "The Lord
saw that the wickedness of humankind was great in the earth…
and it grieved Him to His heart" (Gen. 6:5,6 NRSV). Yes,
God cried.
EUROPE (1096-1100). During the crusades,
Christian soldiers enroute to the Holy Land slaughtered Jews on
the way. Some were herded into their synagogues. Cries of
anguish shrilled unto heaven as the wooden structures were
torched. And God cried.
EUROPE (1204-1799). Protestant blood
flowed freely in Roman Catholic countries. The victims of the
so-called "Holy Inquisition totaled in the millions. And
God cried.
CHRISTIAN WORLD (1490-1850). Over 20
million Black Africans killed in Middle Passage on way to slave
markets for purchase by white Christians. And God Cried.
EUROPE (1941-1945). Six million Jews were hunted,
hounded, driven, butchered, gassed and burned in the Holocaust.
And
God cried.
HIROSHIMA (August 6, 1945). A single
atomic bomb claimed 129,558 victims and terrified the world.
And
God cried.
THE WORLD (1914-1996). Over 175 million
were killed as a result of the insane policies of governments
like Germany, Communist Russia, Cambodia, etc. And God cried.
THIRD WORLD COUNTRIES (1990s). Each day
40,000 babies die of starvation. And God cries.
Then there are the personal tragedies of
loved ones endured daily by hundreds of thousands—senseless
death or mutilation on the highways, babies born physically
deformed or mentally deficient and victims of senseless crime.
Hurricanes, floods, tornadoes, earthquakes, and other disasters
steal the lives of millions in their onslaughts of destruction
and deprivation. Psychological tragedies of dysfunctional
families, drug addiction and the multitudes of lonely, neurotic,
homeless people in turn have left tens of thousands of families
emotionally scarred.
And God cries.
Yes, these statistics fill
the daily news, but only when they strike us or our loved ones
are we overwhelmed with the pain of tragedy. Everyday these
statistics have faces—millions of faces of real people
shattered emotionally and mentally. The cries of sickness,
sorrow, suffering and death encircle the globe. Not one of us
can comprehend the enormity of the total sufferings of all
humankind. Only God can and does see this humongous picture of
human miseries.
And God continues to cry.
Jeremiah 14:17 assures us God even
cries over the tragic loss befalling those who have rebelled
against Him. Yes, God does care when we suffer. He is concerned
when tragedy strikes. God knows our frame that we are but dust
(Psalm 103:14 ). He realizes the enormity of human suffering
could and would cause some to doubt His love and others to doubt
He even exists.
The infinite Creator and God of
the universe wants to convey to mere earthlings—frail humanity—His
compassion and love for us. How can one so omnipotent communicate
His capacity to suffer with finite man? He uses an imagery we can
understand—"tears." Far from being an indication of
weakness, God's imagery of shedding "tears" assures us
of a profound fatherly care and concern. Just how deep is God's
fatherly love?
God's dealing with Israel past,
present and future is a microcosm of His relationship with all
humankind (Isa. 43 & 44; Rom. 11). A parent might discipline a
child by remanding the child to his room for the evening. A loving
parent feels the pain of the child's punishment and often recalls
the many wonderful times they shared together. Likewise it hurts
God when he chastens His people. Listen to the parental sorrow of
God in Jeremiah 6:26. "Thus says the Lord… Oh my poor
people, put on sackcloth,…for suddenly the destroyer
will come upon us (NRSV). This is incredible. The "us"
class is God and Israel. God puts Himself in the picture of
sharing Israel's suffering. This assures us that God chastens in
love. He chastens to heal (Isa.19:22 ). Listen to a loving
father's thoughts of nostalgia while He is chastening Israel, a
disobedient son.
Like [as pleasing as] grapes in
the wilderness, I found Israel, Like the first fruit on the fig tree,
in its first season, I saw your ancestors… When Israel was a child, I loved him, and out of Egypt I called my son.
Hosea 9:10;11:1 (NRSV)
Yet the more God called Israel
the more they disobeyed.
The more I called them,
the more
they went from me;
they kept sacrificing to the Baals,
and offering incense to idols.
Yet it was I who taught Ephraim to walk,
I took them up in my arms;
but they did not know that I healed them.
I led them with cords of human kindness, with bands of love.
I was to them like those
who lift infants to their cheeks.
I bent down to them and fed them.
Hosea 11:2-4 (NRSV)
Israel continued to pervert the
laws of God and neglect the "fatherless and widows."
Severe punishment was inflicted, but not without its toll on God.
God's heart sank to the depths of sorrow, as he withdrew his
loving protection. God exclaimed," I have given the dearly
beloved of my heart into the hand of her enemies." (Jer.
12:7)
When the punishment came Israel
cried, but the Creator and God of the whole Universe cried with
them.
Thus saith the Lord of host…
Call for the mourning women.
And let them…take up a wailing for us,
That our eyes may run down with tears,
And our eyelids gush out with waters.
Jer. 9:17,18 (KJV)
They were scattered to the ends
of the earth. God's punishment was most severe upon Ephraim the
ten-tribe kingdom of Israel. But the Creator and God of the
Universe was suffering with Ephraim (Jer. 14:17) in this severe
chastening of dispersion as noted in His further expressions of
nostalgia:
Truly, Ephraim is a dear son to
Me,
A child that is dandled!
Whenever I have turned against him,
My thoughts would dwell on him still.
That is why My heart yearns for him;
I will receive him back in love.
Declares the LORD.
Jer. 31:20,21 (JPS)
Even while Ephraim (Israel) was
cast off from favor, God in His tender nostalgia spoke of him
prophetically as a son who would be received back in love.
How do we know that God's
expressions of fatherly love – a love that felt Israel's
sufferings during her chastening – were true? How do we know
God's nostalgic longings to restore Israel back to His favor were
true? The rebirth of the State of Israel in 1948 is the proof. It
is a miracle of history. Never before had the polity of a nation
been destroyed, its people scattered to the ends of the earth and
then regathered nearly 2,000 years later to their ancient homeland
to be reborn as a nation. God's fatherly chastening of love will
continue to restore the Jewish people to full favor and belief.
Yes, God chastens to heal. Israel's gradual restoration is the
precursor of all mankind's restoration to God's full love and
favor in His Kingdom. In fact, Romans 11:15 states Israel's
restoration to Divine favor will mean life from the dead for the
whole world.
Oh, what a marvelous God we
have! "In our affliction He is afflicted (suffers)" and
we are assured God's chastenings are rehabilitative so that His
beloved wayward children might be restored to the bosom of His
favor. Yes, God chastens to heal (Isa. 63:9; 19:22).
YADA
God's symbolic tears convey the imagery of a
profound fatherly love and concern. God's capacity to experience
the sufferings of another is also conveyed in the Hebrew verb yada
which is sometimes translated "to know" or
"knew." Yada denotes both an
intellectual and emotional act. It is frequently used to note a
deep emotional experience between two persons. Therefore, it also
means the ability to have a deep sympathetic love – the ability
to feel the emotions of another.
In Exodus 3:7, "The Lord
said, I have seen the afflictions of my people, who are in Egypt,
and have heard their cry because of their taskmasters; I know (yada)
their sufferings." Here God expresses His ability to feel
Israel's sufferings when they were slaves in Egypt. Psalm 31:7
contains a precious promise all Christians should cherish: "I
will rejoice and be glad in Thy lovingkindness, Because Thou hast
seen my affliction; Thou hast known (yada) the
troubles of my soul."
Yes, God's sympathy runs so deep
that He actually knows, in the sense of feeling, our troubles,
sorrows and tragedies. A suffering God puts the question of the
permission of evil in a practical perspective. It is no longer an
academic question or an abstract philosophy. If God suffers when
man suffers, why does God permit suffering? Why does God permit
the evil that causes the suffering of humankind? God knows the end
from the beginning (Isa.46:9,10). The foreknowledge of God adds
another dimension to the scope of God's suffering.
If God shares our suffering why
would He conceive a plan that would result in His own suffering?
The question is no longer—why do good people suffer or why do
innocent children suffer? Rather, why has God permitted a horrific
human history of blood, tragedy, pain and mental anguish that
would just tear away at His Fatherly emotions of love?
Some believe in God and His
tender care for His people but in their own situation feel God has
been too severe—seemingly unjust. |