Twenty-ninth Sunday in Ordinary Time
In my five years as a priest, I’ve had a lot of questions, both from children and adults. The questions kids ask sometimes seem silly, but show real engagement with what the Church teaches: Did Adam and Eve have belly buttons?; Where is heaven? Sometimes they’re come more from movies and TV shows. Around this time of year with Halloween around the corner I often hear: Have you ever seen an exorcism?; Is it hard to get possessed? After five years, I’ve heard probably every question asked in one way or another. And most questions I can answer without any relative problem. But there’s one question, asked by both kids and adults, that is tough to answer: why do bad things happen to good people? In essence, the question is: why is there suffering in the world?
It’s not an easy question to answer. And the answer that people often desire is an answer which will make the pain of suffering go away. We can talk about different types of suffering: there is natural suffering that comes from the way the world was created, like hurricanes, tornadoes, etc., which is just part of the way that the world continues its natural processes. We can talk about moral evil, about someone experiencing pain because of another person, that is much harder to answer. We can look back to the story of the Fall, when humanity in Adam chose to sin and disobey God, and how we are all affected by that choice, but that answer doesn’t really satisfy.
When children have to bury their parent at a young age; when a parent has to bury a child at any age; when a loved-one succumbs to the ravages of alzheimer’s and no longer recognizes anyone; when an employer or manager has to lay off employees simply to keep the company solvent; when you’re the employee that was laid off and you don’t know how you will make ends meet for you and your family; when a parent or parents have to make a decision that upsets children in such a way that the relationship is damaged, but which is in the best interest for the children; those are all experiences of suffering that a lot of theology about Original Sin and fallen humanity doesn’t quite take away the pain. One of my most difficult moments as a priest was trying to comfort a family after the father, Shaye Ramont, died from multiple fights with cancer at the age of 50, and left behind a widow and 6 children that I knew, the oldest of which was in high school and the youngest of which were twins in elementary school. At that moment, no theological gymnastics could take away the pain that the Ramont family was experiencing. All I could do was just hug them, love them, and pray for them.
The good news is that our God, in the person of Jesus, took upon Himself all our suffering, and experienced it throughout His earthly life. Sometimes the hardest thing about suffering is that we feel alone. No matter who else has gone through similar circumstances, there is a realization that no one else knows exactly what we’re going through, and that isolation adds to the pain of the already painful situation. But Jesus does know. Jesus walks with us through the valley of the shadow of death, and never abandons us. Our God loved us enough to sacrifice His Only-Begotten Son so that we would not be alone in suffering, but could always have someone to suffer with. That is how Jesus came for us: not to be served but to serve, and to give His life for us so that we would not be alone precisely when we feel the most alone: in our suffering.
Whatever our suffering, we can unite it to Jesus on the cross. We can allow Jesus to walk with us in our suffering so that we are not alone. It is not an answer to the problem of bad things happening to good people, but it is a consolation to know that whatever our suffering, we are not alone. Whatever pain you are undergoing at this time, or whatever pain you will undergo in the future, never be afraid to turn to Jesus and say, “Jesus, please walk with me during this time of pain and suffering. Unite my suffering with yours on the cross. Help me to know that I’m not alone, but that you suffer with me.” Amen.