You say that as if it is something to be proud about. Don't let it get you down though, I'll pray for you.Paidion wrote:I do, of course. I'm an open theist!Do you believe that God will heal someone if it isn't his will to do so?

D.
You say that as if it is something to be proud about. Don't let it get you down though, I'll pray for you.Paidion wrote:I do, of course. I'm an open theist!Do you believe that God will heal someone if it isn't his will to do so?
I was joking as well (as I tried to indicate with thePaidion wrote:What I said was my feeble attempt to kid around a bit. In an earlier post, Michelle exclaimed, "How open theistic!". I didn't think she was being serious, and so I sort of got in on the kidding-around mood.
I'm glad you brought that up Homer. I was going to say something to this effect last night, but I didn't have time to post.I have also prayed in anguish, more than once, for God to change his will. When you see a beloved grandchild within hours of death, in enormous suffering, on life support for quite some time, it is rather easy to pray as Hezekiah did! (And God healed her - Praise God!) Whether God changed His mind I can not say.
That is a good point. I think many of us see things as "suffering" or "painful" when it is a pea under a mattress kind of discomfort in the big scheme of things. We get all anguished when we don't get that promotion or can't afford that extra car or 50 extra channels on our cable. We think we're poor even though we have incomes twice that of the poverty line and those under the poverty line live better than most of the population of the world. We're spoiled and "suffer" if we don't get what we want.Steve wrote:Sickness is not the worst affliction that God's people may be called to suffer. Many forms of violent persecution, or even emotional devastation (as through a divorce or other loss) can be much worse.
In my experience, both with heartache and childbirth, it's not so much that the pain is gone or forgotten (if you want, I will recount both of my children's births for you, including the pain, even after a quarter of a centuryyou wrote:When it concentration is on the heartache, it doesn't go away. When the concentration is on Him, He helps you forget the heartache. It's like a new mom forgetting all the pain once she holds the new baby. The pain goes away. There is a lot of medicine in the "Think on these things" and "seek ye first" passages. They heal a lot of wounds.