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The biggest problem I have in my own spiritual journey in trying to make sense of the universe is the problem of suffering.
Now, I'm not talking about my own life. Indeed, my life (with a few rough patches) has been relatively suffering-free. I have a loving family, enough money to survive, a decent job, etc. So this is not a case of "my life sucks". My own life is good.
But that is not true for a lot of other people.
I am making a distinction here between what I call "human-actioned suffering" and "natural suffering." "Human-actioned suffering" are things that are caused by human beings. Stuff like wars, genocide, etc. It is not the Holocaust, or various murders, or any of the other horrible things that humans do to each other, or themselves, that makes me doubt the existence of God.
No, it's stuff like the tsunami. Or various sundry horrible incurable diseases. Or the asteroid that wiped out the dinosaurs. Or a kitten being eaten alive by maggots. That's the stuff that gets me and makes me doubt.
At the same time, while I have these doubts, I also believe that there is a spiritual reality of some sort. Traditional Christianity links suffering with sin (the wages of sin is death), but that makes little sense to me any more, since animals undoubtedly suffer yet they cannot sin. But while traditional Christian dogma is nonsensical to my mind, concepts of the "inner light" as understood by the Quakers, or the teachings of the Sufis about Love and the Oneness of the Universe, make a LOT of sense to me, and "ring true" in my mind and heart.
Yet, there is that old problem of natural suffering again.
These are the shoals I am trying to navigate.
I would be interested in hearing how Quakers, Sufis, and like-minded folk deal with the reality of suffering in the natural world.
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