Human Suffering In Night And A Grief Observed

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The issue of God and human suffering is a very difficult subject to discuss and talk about. Multiple views of God portrait God as an all-powerful and loving God. This cause many to wonder how a loving God who has all the power to allow such horrible suffering to happen especially to good people. Some people in this world could be considered amazing human beings who are completely selfless and only do good things to others and yet they can experience some of the harshest and cruelest rounds of suffering possible in this world. This is very hard to explain why and how this happens. I have seen and heard of several devote believers of God to turn away and quit believing because of the harsh suffering they went through. However, at the end of …show more content…

Many would say it is not fair that Elie Wiesel had to be tortured by Nazis in the Holocaust or that C.S. Lewis had to lose the love of his life. However, both had a different take on how the suffering changed who they were as a person and how it changed their take on God and human suffering. Both Elie and C.S. Lewis struggled with not knowing where God was. To them, God appeared to have left them both and was no longer with them. During Elie’s suffering, he proclaimed, “My eyes had opened and I was alone, terribly alone in a world without God, without man” (Wiesel 68). Elie’s suffering cause his faith of God to be tested greatly. After his suffering ended finally, Elie’s faith in God was damaged but seemed to have some faith still remaining. C.S. Lewis faces similar questioning of God by saying, “Not that I am (I think) in much danger of ceasing to believe in God. The real danger is of coming to believe such dreadful things about Him” (Lewis 6). C.S. Lewis faces similar questioning of why God allows these bad things to happen. At the end of Lewis’s suffering after he goes through stages of grieving, he realizes how his suffering had a purpose to allow him to grow into a better person. Both Elie and C.S. Lewis faced great suffering and both of their relationships with God were