Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events is a book series in which the three orphaned children protagonists are constantly on the verge of destruction by nature and especially their distant relative Count Orlaf. The local government has entrusted the children to the Count's care, most of the time. The series author is open about he own difficult childhood and wanted to write stories that didn't end like a 1970's sitcom with smiles and everyone having a pillow fight in joy.
Still, there is an amazing expression of God's grace in the stories. Just at the point at which the children are doomed a small ray a change prevents serious calamity. In a way that can feel very true-to-life, the children are buffeted on all sides, yet not broken. Paul's recounting (to clarify the legitimacy of his message of grace and the end of the law that Christ spoke on the cross -
IT IS FINISHED) of his own near-death encounters:
2 Corinthians 11:23-27 (Darby Translation)
23Are they ministers of Christ? (I speak as being beside myself) *I* above measure [so]; in labours exceedingly abundant, in stripes to excess, in prisons exceedingly abundant, in deaths oft.
24From the Jews five times have I received forty [stripes], save one.
25Thrice have I been scourged, once I have been stoned, three times I have suffered shipwreck, a night and day I passed in the deep:
26in journeyings often, in perils of rivers, in perils of robbers, in perils from [my own] race, in perils from [the] nations, in perils in [the] city, in perils in [the] desert, in perils on [the] sea, in perils among false brethren;
27in labour and toil, in watchings often, in hunger and thirst, in fastings often, in cold and nakedness.
Given the well-known terrible behavior of Paul prior to his being saved and God's grace invading his life, it was evident to all those at Corinth reading the above passage that Paul had done nothing to deserve the ongoing rescue from his own "series of unfortunate events". And for the "ultraists", please note a couple of things:
- Not one of the the above calamities does Paul attribute to Satan. Life is way bad enough on its own. But God preserved him.
- Paul does not suggest that he is especially the best person to carry God's truth (he says just the opposite is true). Paul does not speak of "doing God's work". Just a statement is exactly the opposite of what Paul says. The message is almost that in this hurricane of life in which we find ourselves, God sustains and "LOOK! God is doing good things too, even in spite of me!"
The children in Lemony Snicket are held from harm by seeming accidental help. So the analogy with them and God's grace must end. Paul was sustained by God. We are sustained by God. Not to fend off Satan (We are Christ's children). Not so that we will have one more healthy week so we can do such and such thing so that God's message will get through (Sorry folks, God doesn't really need us).
No. We are cared for by God because He loves us. Suffering is not right. It is not pleasant. It can lead a person to distrust and reject EVERYTHING he/she previously held true. God made us and He knows that about us. That is why He settled the nature of our relationship once forever at the cross.
Thanks to Lemony for a glimpse at God.