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@madinajonashboyev: szdan boshqasi borimcha qabul qila olmadi ona
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Region: UZ
Tuesday 14 July 2026 07:59:23 GMT
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What worth is God, if He can watch a man suffer while knowing that, in a single moment, He could change the man’s song? What worth is prayer, if heaven hears every word and still allows the night to continue? What worth is power, if it stands beside pain and does not intervene? These are not the questions of unbelieving men alone. They are the questions of Job upon the ashes, David in the caves, Jeremiah among the ruins, and Christ Himself beneath the silence of heaven. There are seasons when a man does not doubt that God is able. That is precisely what wounds him. He knows God can heal. He knows God can open the door, restore the years, silence the accusation, return what was lost, and command morning to break upon his life. His grief is not that God lacks power. His grief is that God possesses it completely and appears unwilling to use it. Martha stood before Christ with this same wound: “Lord, if You had been here, my brother would not have died.” She did not question His strength. She questioned His delay. And perhaps that is where faith becomes most difficult—not when God is absent, but when He is near and silent. A man can survive an enemy who cannot help him. What is harder to endure is a Father who can, but does not. And I like that scripture does not protect God from this accusation, rather gives suffering men permission to speak plainly. The Psalms are filled with questions heaven did not censor: “How long?” “Why have You forgotten me?” “Why do You hide Your face?” The Bible is not frightened by the anger of wounded men. It knows that lament is sometimes the last thread by which faith remains tied to God. For even complaint is a kind of belief. A man does not argue with a God he has completely abandoned. Still, there is no easy answer. Some suffering appears to produce nothing noble. Some graves remain graves. Some prayers seem to rise and return unanswered. Some men carry burdens that do not strengthen them but simply exhaust them. To offer them shallow explanations is to place another stone upon their backs. We must be careful not to call every wound a lesson, every loss a test, or every delay preparation. Sometimes pain is simply pain, and the holiest thing we can do is sit beside the suffering man without forcing meaning upon his sorrow. But Christianity makes one astonishing claim: God did not answer human suffering from a safe distance. He entered it. At Calvary, God did not merely watch a man suffer. In Christ, He became the suffering man. The One who could command angels allowed Himself to be wounded. The One who raised the dead entered death. The One who could change the song in a moment remained upon the cross until the song became a cry: “My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me?” This does not explain every silence. But it changes the character of the One who is silent. He is not a distant king entertained by human grief. He is the wounded God, acquainted with sorrow, who has carried abandonment in His own body. He does not ask men to walk through a valley He has never entered. Perhaps, then, the worth of God is not measured only by how quickly He removes suffering, but by whether He can redeem what He permits, remain present within what He does not prevent, and raise life from what appeared completely finished. Joseph’s prison was not the end of his song. David’s wilderness was not the end. Lazarus’ tomb was not the end. Good Friday itself was not the end. But resurrection does not make the cross painless. Morning does not make the night imaginary. And hope must never be used to silence grief. So let the suffering man ask his question. Let him raise his voice without fear. Let him tell God that the night has lasted too long. Let him say that heaven feels cruel, that prayer feels empty, and that faith has become heavy in his hands. God is not made smaller by the honesty of a wounded man.
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