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Home > 2007 > MarchChristianity Today, March, 2007  |   |  
Reflections
Suffering God
Quotations to stir heart and mind.



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HE WAS DESPISED and rejected by others; a man of suffering and acquainted with infirmity. … Surely he has borne our infirmities and carried our diseases; yet we accounted him stricken, struck down by God, and afflicted. But he was wounded for our transgressions, crushed for our iniquities; upon him was the punishment that made us whole, and by his bruises we are healed.
Isaiah 53:3-5 (NRSV)

THERE IS GOOD biblical evidence that God not only suffered in Christ, but that God in Christ suffers with his people still. … It is wonderful that we may share in Christ's sufferings; it is more wonderful still that he shares in ours.
John R. W. Stott, The Cross of Christ

HAS NOT GOD in Jesus Christ become radically open to the life of the world and become vulnerable to human sin and suffering? In the light of the gospel story, God is not impassible, but passionate, suffering love. If God is love, then receptivity, vulnerability, and suffering are not strange to God's being. God is free to love and thus free to experience the suffering of the world.
Daniel L. Migliore, The Power of God

UNLESS GOD is on the balance and throws his weight as a counterbalance, we shall sink to the bottom of the scale. If it is not true that God died for us, but only a man died, we are lost. But if God's death and God lie dead in the opposite scale, then his side goes down and we go upward like a light or empty pan. But he could not have sat in the pan unless he became a man like us, so that it could be said: God dead, God's passion, God's blood, God's death.
Martin Luther, quoted in the Formula of Concord

IT IS A GOOD THING to learn early that God and suffering are not opposites but rather one and the same thing and necessarily so; for me, the idea that God himself suffers is far and away the most convincing piece of Christian doctrine.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Letters and Papers from Prison

GOD not only participates in our suffering, but also makes our suffering into his own and takes death into his life.
Jurgen Moltmann, in Theology Today

A THEOLOGY that embraces the idea that God cannot suffer has to answer the question: Can God love? Abraham Heschel rightly said that the essence of Hebraic prophetic faith is that God takes the people of his covenantal love so seriously that he suffers for their actions.
Dennis Ngien, in Christianity Today

GRANT, O LORD, that in your wounds I may find my safety, in your stripes my cure, in your pain my peace, in your Cross my victory, in your Resurrection my triumph, and a crown of righteousness in the glories of your eternal kingdom.
Jeremy Taylor, The Westminster Collection of Christian Prayers



Related Elsewhere:

Other Lent, Holy Week, and Easter reflections include:

Lenten Inventory (February 1, 2004)
His Body, His Blood (June 2005)
Good Friday (April 3, 2000)
Jesus' Cross (March 1, 2004)
Crucifixion (March 11, 2002)
Holy Week (April 1, 2006)
Holy Week (April 23, 2001)
Cross and Resurrection (April 1, 2003)
Easter Sunday (April 3, 2000)
He is Risen (April 1, 2004)




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[Reader Reviews]
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Displaying 1 - 3 of 15 comments.See all comments
Tim   Posted: March 05, 2007 8:05 PM
My dad used to say to me "I love you so much it hurts." I have two little girls and I now know what he meant. I have always considered that love and pain were not mutually exclusive, but went hand in hand. God's loving choice to create, and loving choice to redeem in and through His Son Jesus were both rooted in the Divine constant of Love. Both also involved divine pain, creating something outside one's self involves the pain of letting go. Part of the divine mystery of redemption is also the divine mystery of the incarnation- the divine-human Jesus entering the world of human suffering, contingency and eventually death- all out of love. As to where does it say that God suffers?, the stories of Hosea and Jeremiah's lives are intended as descriptions not only of His people's rejection but also God's reaction to that rejection. We run the risk of anthropomorphism whenever we attempt to describe God too closely in terms of our experience,but that shouldn't prevent holy imagination

Bradford Rosenquist   Posted: March 05, 2007 4:14 PM
There is no question as to the emotional and beautifical aspect of believing that God suffers. My question is simply this, and this, by the way, must be the bottom line on all statements about God, where in the Bible does it state: "God suffers?" We read of the messianic prophecies of what the Messiah would suffer...but we do not read of God suffering. In our desperate desire to somehow get God down to our level [our effort to do so...not God's effort as already accomplished as described in the gospel of John "made flesh and dwelt among us" ] we can easily get off the track and state things in a most compelling and beautiful and poetic fashion that simply are not biblically sound. God cannot die. God is spirit and spirit is eternal. Jesus the man died. Jesus the man was without sin. Jesus, the creator God did not die. If we believe that death is defined as without life, then we see that Jesus has never been without life, as he is the Creator God...the giver of life

KT   Posted: March 05, 2007 2:30 PM
May be only Christians understand why God had to suffer in order to pay for humans sins. As a non Christian my understanding is very different but this might explain the unique way of explaining God. God=Love Any body disagrees? How can you love someone without Freedom? It is the top priority for God to give us unlimited freedom. Unfortunately freedom comes with a price that is evil or bad. But it does not matter for the God. He gave so much freedom to us that it was OK to mock Him, beat Him, spat on Him and even kill Him. His suffering is the most radical manifestation of Grace. vcindiana@yahoo.com

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