Gela

Gela
He leads me beside still waters

Monday 5 August 2013

Pain of Decay and Pain of the Birth of the New Age


Rev Lindsay Johnstone, Chaplain, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney

 

How theologically and Biblically do we understand pain and suffering within the present order?

When relating with patients, do we treat all pain as the same?

 

Patients have their own perspectives on suffering. One said:

 …The enemy … the accuser of the brethren, Satan. All evil comes from him …  I know that we live in a fallen world, and horrible things happen every day all over the world. ... And people choose to do the wrong thing … He (God) doesn’t take away our freedom of choice, for good, or for evil… I know that God is heartbroken too…

 

Chaplains have their perspectives too and know that they should not impose them. At the same time, the clearer and most comprehensive is the chaplain’s own understanding of the issues, the more space they have to respond to what the patient brings them.

 

Paul Grimmond has dedicated his book Suffering Well to the many who have travelled to the other side of the world to speak to complete strangers about our Lord Jesus Christ. They have counted the cost, lived for Jesus, and encouraged me by their example to suffer well [i].  However, Grimmond deals inadequately with the pain of the fall. His treatment of James 5 neglects most of James 5: 14-18. He says only  -  And in James 5, James seems to suggest healing is possible – but the way to find it is by confessing your sins[ii].

 

Helpfully, Romans 8: 18-23 deals with two categories of pain in the present time between the first and second comings of Christ. All pain is experienced in the fallen world. Some is in consequence of the fall. Some pain is connected with the inauguration of the Kingdom of God.

 

For I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worth comparing with the glory that is to be revealed to us.  For the creation waits with eager longing for the revealing of the sons of God. For the creation was subjected to futility, not willingly, but because of him who subjected it, in hope  that the creation itself will be set free from its bondage to corruption and obtain the freedom of the glory of the children of God. For we know that the whole creation has been groaning together in the pains of childbirth until now. And not only the creation, but we ourselves, who have the firstfruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for adoption as sons, the redemption of our bodies. (ESV)

 

(1)    There is the Pain of Decay – pain which arises out of the old order

Suffering of this type includes: all sin, relationship breakdown, human rejection, self-rejection, inner turmoil, curses, natural disaster, pollution, ecological disaster, demonic attack, sickness, physical death, blaming of God, rejection of God.

 

(2)    There is the Pain of New-Birth –pain which anticipates the new order

Suffering of this type includes: mortification regarding one’s own sin, pain for others affected by their sin (or by our sin as well!), persecution and rejection for professing the Name of Christ and for trying to live for him, the care of the churches, acceptance of a missionary life-style, the groaning of intercession, the discipline of the Lord whereby we are reproved by the Word of God, and the wrestle not to express sinful desires.

 

Christ links the two. From the fall, pain in child-birth was symptomatic of suffering outside the garden – yet the seed of the woman born in the mother’s pain would bruise the serpent’s head (Genesis 3:15,16). In Romans 8 the term “birth-pangs” has now moved from a focus on the fall to a focus on the coming new order, as Christ has now bruised the serpent’s head.

 

Pain of the first type is neither to be glorified nor blamed upon God[iii]. Pain of the second type is commendable – even though it hurts. The establishment of the new order will involve a reversal of the pain of the old. We currently negotiate the “now and not yet” paradox of life between the First and Second Comings of Christ. In Romans 8: 17 believers are already adopted as God’s children, but as verse 23 says, when Christ returns we shall experience that adoption in our resurrected bodies. Although flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God, yet when the trumpet sounds this mortal body will put on immortality[iv]. Any healing which was tentative will be absolute. There is a connection between the present and the future. Our inner-most spirit is forgiven, restored and healed, and we are in process of this newness being manifested in our minds, feelings, wills and bodies – in preparation for the unfettered experiences of all this newness to be completed in heaven. We should function on the basis that God is at work now on his restoration plan; and not just passively wait for it all in heaven.[v]

 



[i] Paul Grimmond, Suffering Well (Matthias Media 2011) p.7
[ii] Ibid, p.83
[iii] “blamed upon God” in this context refers to a theological stance accepting a sickness as “the will of God” and does not necessarily here refer to the emotional experience of a hurting person in the process of ventilating.
[iv]  I Corinthians 15: 50-58
[v]  See Ephesians 1: 9-10, 22-23 and 2:6 – Christ as Head over the Church is continuously working through the church in the Father’s ongoing process of recapitulating and restoring all things, using every means.