Sabbath: The Problem of Evil
Daily Lesson for Sabbath 8th of February 2025
Read for This Week’s Study: Job 30:26; Matthew 27:46; Job 38:1-12; Psalms 73:1-28; Genesis 2:16-17; Revelation 21:3-4.
Memory Text:
“ ‘And God will wipe away every tear from their eyes; there shall be no more death, nor sorrow, nor crying. There shall be no more pain, for the former things have passed away’ ” (Revelation 21:4, NKJV).
Perhaps the greatest problem facing Christianity is the problem of evil—how to reconcile the fact that God is perfectly good and loving, with the fact of evil in this world. In brief terms, if God is all-good and all-powerful, why is there evil, and so much of it, too?
This is not merely an academic problem but something that deeply troubles many people and that keeps some from coming to know and love God.
“To many minds the origin of sin and the reason for its existence are a source of great perplexity. They see the work of evil, with its terrible results of woe and desolation, and they question how all this can exist under the sovereignty of One who is infinite in wisdom, in power, and in love. Here is a mystery of which they find no explanation.”—Ellen G. White, The Great Controversy, p. 492.
Many atheists identify the problem of evil as the reason that they are atheists. But as we will see in this week and in coming weeks, the God of the Bible is entirely good, and we can trust Him—even despite the evil that so infects our fallen world.
*Study this week’s lesson to prepare for Sabbath, February 15.
![](https://ssnet.org/wp-content/plugins/like-dislike/images/up.png)
I read this quote about 60 years ago and it has helped me understand the complexity of good and evil. It is something to keep in our minds this week as we study this complex topic.