Finding it difficult to believe in a God who orders the destruction of human life is not a new phenomenon. Many have found it hard to square what the Bible says about God’s love with what it says about His violence.
But if we are intellectually honest, the question shouldn’t be whether the God of the Bible conforms to our personal standards of right and wrong—but whether He is the real God. If He is true, the question of whether we “like” Him becomes secondary to the question of whether He is worthy of worship.
As it turns out, it is philosophically possible to believe in a God who is both loving and vengeful. Anger is often the only appropriate response when someone you love is hurt. In fact, we wouldn’t want to worship a God who didn’t respond to the injustices of this world with the determination to fix them.
The apex of this “two-sided” love and anger is the Cross. There, Jesus willingly absorbed the evil of a fallen world so that His Father’s wrath could lovingly cut it out forever.
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