Tag Archives: suffering

The Narrow Gate

“Evil will arrive disguised as supposed well-being, false happiness, feigned peace, of apparent great opportunities…”

Have you had the opportunity to go through a narrow path or door perhaps in your community or on a tourist trip? How did you feel? Was it easy to do, or did you have any difficulty or fear in doing it?

I remember that one of the experiences I had years ago, while doing a video report, was when I visited the home of a low-income family on the Ecuadorian coast. This family lived in the back of a house, located in a neighborhood of extreme poverty, with practically no comfort. Although the front was concrete, I crossed a very narrow small side path to reach the small place rented by the family I interviewed. With great difficulty I managed to cross this dark and narrow passageway, I did it from the side, impossible to pass straight ahead, the space was very small. As I passed by the side of this house, I felt supremely uncomfortable, with uncertainty because I didn’t know what I was going to find at the end of the passage and if it weren’t for the fact that I was accompanied I probably would have felt fear as well.

NarrowGateWell then, Jesus during the well-known “Sermon on the Mount” urged His disciples and in general the large audience that was listening to Him to “enter by the narrow gate.” He specifically told them: “Enter by the narrow gate; for wide is the gate and broad is the way that leads to destruction, and there are many who go in by it. Because narrow is the gate and difficult is the way which leads to life, and there are few who find it.” (Matthew 7:13-14) This exhortation also extends to us today.

Contrary to what we might think, Jesus clearly affirms that wide is the path and wide is the door that leads humankind to evil. In fact, evil will never initially present itself with suffering, tragedy, pain; evil will arrive disguised as supposed well-being, false happiness, feigned peace, of apparent great opportunities; but at the end of the road, it will unmask itself and show its true face – tragedy with no return -.

Jesus in the referred passage is talking about the path to eternal life. A path that begins on this Earth and that each human soul has the freedom to decide where to go; whether by the path that leads to life itself, or by the path that leads to eternal death.

I invite you then to consider the following:

  1. Every day we hear in different places that “all roads lead to God or to the same god.” But it is not so, do not fool yourself, or be fooled. The only way that leads to eternal life is Jesus Christ. He himself said: “I am the way, and the truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father except through me” (John 14:6).
  2. Consequently Jesus is the only door that leads to the path of salvation. He himself affirmed: “I am the door; whoever enters through me will be saved…” (John 10:9)
  3. And while we walk the path of salvation, the path to eternal life, a path that many times will not be easy, Jesus will be our sustainer. He clearly stated it: “I am the bread of life; he who comes to me will never be hungry; and whoever believes in me will never thirst ”(John 6:35).

The path of salvation, the path to eternal life will not be easy, those of us who have chosen it or those who will choose it, it clearly means that we will have to put aside the “apparent good proposals that life offers us.” The path to eternal life means that we decide to walk in the footsteps of our Master, our Savior, our Lord, our Creator God – Christ Jesus; and these footsteps represent: loving sacrificially, forgiving and sometimes to those who don’t deserve it – humanly speaking, telling the truth, acting with integrity. All this, although many times it is incredibly against us.

Jesus said: “I have spoken these things to you so that in me you may have peace. In the world you will have affliction; but take heart, I have overcome the world” (John 16:33).

Yes, if you decide to choose the narrow gate – Christ Jesus – as your Personal Savior, you will probably experience afflictionlight-at-the-end-of-the-tunnel-2022-10-19-05-08-32-utc throughout your life here on Earth; but surely along the way and at the end of it you will find the peace that surpasses all understanding. And that is only found through an intimate relationship with Christ Jesus, our personal Savior, the only true God. But if you do not, unfortunately, your destiny will be – tragedy with no return –; in other words, your destiny will be hell, a real place of eternal torment!

Now, you are just one step away from experiencing that peace, which no one will take it away from you. Pray like this:

God, Creator of the universe and everything in it, I recognize that I am a sinner and today I ask your forgiveness with all my heart. Forgive me and cleanse me of all evil in my life and receive me as one of your children and teach me to walk with an upright heart before you and those around me. Today, I declare that Jesus, your Son, is my Savior and that by His blood shed on the cross, I am forgiven of all my sins. Thank you, Almighty God, for your great mercy and for giving me eternal life in your Kingdom today. I pray all this in the Name of Jesus, your beloved son. Amen.

Peace and Adversity, Beauty and Pain…just in one place?

“If there is a loving God who created us, then he ought to be distraught at the state of the world.”

                                                                                         Amber Van Schooneveld

Amber Van Schooneveld, writer

Amber Van Schooneveld, writer

 

 

Amber is the senior writer and editor for Compassion Canada. Before, she worked for Compassion International, as editorial manager of writers and photographers in the field. Amber has always had a sensitive heart to the suffering in the world. When she was a child, she would cry when other children would kill ants. Since then, she has moved on to be moved by greater suffering in the world. Amber is the author of Hope Lives and Passport to Prayer, both aimed at helping people know God’s heart for the suffering in this world and to take action. She has a degree in English from Colorado State University and lives in Colorado with her wonderful family.

 

 

 
Is it possible for peace and adversity, for poverty and wealth, for beauty and pain to fill this world at once?
Sometimes, sitting in my peaceful home in Colorado, enjoying the lovely scenery, having a hearty family meal together and watching my children play with each other, the images you watch in the news of war, disaster and extreme poverty can seem inconceivable. How is it that I, even with all of life’s pains, disappointments and inconveniences, can live in such security when so many others, Syrian war refugees, for example, live in such fear and deprivation? It boggles the mind.

Yet we all know that this is indeed the state of the world. But none of our experiences are all good or all bad. Even in my secure and peaceful life, I’m not sheltered from the pain of cancer or suicide. And those living in extreme poverty also can still have the joy of family and the beauty of God’s creation. All, or at least, most of us experience both great beauty and love and heartbreaking pain and loss.

 

In your several journeys throughout developed and developing countries, what has caught your attention in regards to this phenomenon?
Returning home to the US after traveling to a developing country, I’m almost always struck by how

Amber, author of "Hope lives"

Amber, author of “Hope lives”

people don’t realize how good we have it. Living in a relatively affluent place, it’s easy to look around at those wealthier than you and believe that you are just barely making it. Few of us have the context to understand the luxury we live in because we aren’t surrounded by the alternative of people who do not have running water, adequate food, safe homes or access to banking, medical care, insurance or social safety nets.

On the other hand, I’m always struck by how similar we all are, no matter what country we are from. People are people. There are significant cultural differences, but I believe at our core we are all far more alike than we are different. We have the same desires, to be loved, to be safe, and to see our children and families thrive.

 

Is it God’s responsibility (if there is a God) or man’s responsibility for all the tragedies this world is experiencing?

I would say it is both. If there is a loving God who created us, then he ought to be distraught at the state of the world. And the Bible tells us that He is. (For example, In Luke 19, it is recorded that Jesus wept over the suffering that was to come to Jerusalem. And throughout the Old Testament it says that God hears the cry of the oppressed.) So the most challenging question that has ever been asked is, why does a loving God allow so much suffering? It’s not a question I can presume to answer well, and I don’t think it’s one we will fully understand on this side of eternity.

Many Christians have answered the question of suffering by saying that God uses our suffering to strengthen our faith and draw us toward Him. While we know that God uses suffering, both from experience and from passages like Romans 5:3-5, I don’t think this answer is the whole story. It can lead to bad theology, for example, someone asserting that God caused a child to die in order to teach a mother a lesson about faith. For me, the truth that I cling to when staggered by the suffering in the world is that God created a world in which there is free will because He wanted to create a world of loving relationships. For love to exist, free will is necessary, meaning man is free to do both good or evil. God says He has a plan to redeem the evil that is perpetrated in this world, but just like a tapestry that is beautiful on one side and tangled on the other, it is hard to see the sense of so much suffering in our limited perspective.

But throughout the Bible, God says that we are also responsible to answer to the suffering in the world. He calls us to speak out for justice, to break the chains of the oppressed and to help those in poverty. Although we don’t understand why suffering is allowed, we do know that God calls us to be active in stamping it out of this world. In fact, in Ephesians 2:10, Paul says that God has prepared good works for us to do in advance! What a huge honor that God values us so much as to allow us to be His hands in actively bringing peace, justice and equality to the world.

 

As surely we cannot close our eyes and say that this world is a “paradise,” is there any hope?

Amber, in one of her trips, sharing with two little Indian girls

Amber, in one of her trips, sharing with two little Indian girls

Though we can’t fully understand why God allows so much suffering, I often think back to Genesis 16, in which God noticed the suffering of Hagar, a servant. When she was dying in the desert, God saw her need and helped her, which led her to call Him “the God who sees.” In the midst of our suffering, we are never alone. God says He is close to the broken hearted. He sees the pain of the world, He listens to the cries of the oppressed, and He calls all of us to be active in being His hands in offering comfort, succor, love and physical help to this world.