I
found the following devotional that I would like to share with you. From
https://www.biblegateway.com/blog/2015/11/mourning-with-those-who-mourn-looking-for-answers-to-the-terror-in-paris/)
—Enrique
“Lately
we mourn and pray for our brothers and sisters in France—for those who lost
loved ones in the recent terror attacks, and for the millions of French
citizens who must now try to process this brutality.
One
of the oldest and toughest challenges for Christians is finding a way to
understand the existence of terrible evil in a world that is ruled by a loving,
all-powerful God. It’s not an easy question to answer—if it were, we wouldn’t
be struggling with it thousands of years after Christ—but the Bible does offer
hope in the face of violence and evil.
There
are many Bible passages that talk about evil and suffering; one of the
best-known is Romans 8, which reads in part: “The sufferings we have now are
nothing compared to the great glory that will be shown to us. Everything God
made is waiting with excitement for God to show his children’s glory
completely. Everything God made was changed to become useless, not by its own
wish but because God wanted it and because all along there was this hope: that
everything God made would be set free from ruin to have the freedom and glory
that belong to God’s children.
We
know that everything God made has been waiting until now in pain, like a woman
ready to give birth. Not only the world, but we also have been waiting with
pain inside us. We have the Spirit as the first part of God’s promise. So we
are waiting for God to finish making us his own children, which means our
bodies will be made free. We were saved, and we have this hope. If we see what
we are waiting for, that is not really hope. People do not hope for something
they already have. But we are hoping for something we do not have yet, and we
are waiting for it patiently” (Rom. 8:18-25).
We
invite you to spend some time in prayer for our brothers and sisters in France.
May God comfort the survivors, may He grant safety to police and rescue
workers, and may the church of Jesus Christ be a beacon of hope for those
overwhelmed by sorrow.”
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