It is one of the oldest and most honest questions a human being can ask: If God is good and God is powerful, why does He allow suffering?
If you are asking this question right now, you are not alone. You are not losing your faith. You may, in fact, be deepening it. The Bible is filled with people who asked this very question—not from a place of rebellion, but from a place of raw, aching honesty. Job asked it from a pile of ashes. David asked it through tears. Even Jesus cried out from the cross, "My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?"
This article will not give you a neat, tidy answer to the problem of suffering. Anyone who claims to have one is not being honest with the text. But what Scripture does offer is something better than a clean explanation: the presence of a God who enters suffering with you, who weeps with you, and who promises that suffering will not have the last word.
What the Bible Does NOT Say About Suffering
Before looking at what Scripture does teach, it helps to clear away some things it does not say. These are well-meaning ideas that can do real damage when someone is in pain.
Suffering Is Not Always Punishment
Job's friends assumed his suffering was caused by sin. God rebuked them for it (Job 42:7). Jesus Himself rejected the idea that suffering is always connected to personal sin. When His disciples asked about a man born blind—"Who sinned, this man or his parents?"—Jesus answered, "Neither" (John 9:2-3).
If you are suffering and someone tells you it is because of something you did, the Bible does not support that claim as a universal rule.
Suffering Is Not a Sign of Weak Faith
Paul suffered shipwrecks, beatings, imprisonment, and a chronic physical ailment he called a "thorn in the flesh" (2 Corinthians 12:7). He was not lacking faith. He was one of the most faithful people who ever lived. Suffering is not a faith test you are failing.
God Does Not Promise to Explain Everything
When God finally speaks to Job after 37 chapters of agony, He does not explain why Job suffered. He reveals who He is. That distinction matters. God does not always answer the "why." He answers the "who"—and invites us to trust Him even when we cannot see the reason.
What the Bible DOES Say About Suffering
Scripture addresses suffering with remarkable honesty. It does not minimize pain, and it does not pretend the world is fine. Here is what it does teach.
1. We Live in a Broken World
The Bible teaches that suffering entered the world through the fall (Genesis 3). Creation itself is described as "groaning" under the weight of brokenness:
Suffering is not part of God's original design. It is an intruder. And God is working to reverse it completely—a work that began at the cross and will be completed when Christ returns.
2. God Is Present in Suffering
The most profound thing Christianity offers to the problem of suffering is not a philosophical argument but a person. God did not stay distant from human pain. He entered it.
Jesus knew hunger, exhaustion, betrayal, grief, abandonment, and excruciating physical pain. When you suffer, you do not pray to a God who watches from a distance. You pray to one who has been where you are.
3. God Can Bring Good From Suffering
This is one of the most quoted verses in the Bible, and one of the most misused. It does not say everything that happens is good. It says God works within it:
The "good" here is not comfort or prosperity. The next verse defines it: being "conformed to the image of his Son" (Romans 8:29). God's ultimate purpose in suffering is not to make your life easy. It is to shape you into the likeness of Christ. That does not make the pain less real, but it gives it a direction.
4. Suffering Is Temporary
The Bible is unflinchingly honest about the reality of pain. But it also insists, with equal force, that suffering is temporary:
Paul wrote those words from prison, covered in scars. He called his suffering "light and momentary"—not because it did not hurt, but because he could see it against the backdrop of eternity. When you are in the middle of pain, eternity can feel impossibly far away. But it is real, and it is coming.
5. It Is Okay to Ask Why
If you are angry, confused, or heartbroken, God can handle it. The Psalms are filled with raw, unfiltered cries of pain directed at God:
David did not sanitize his prayers. Jesus quoted Psalm 22 from the cross. If the Son of God could cry out "why" in His darkest hour, you have permission to do the same. Honest questioning is not the opposite of faith. It is often the most courageous expression of it.
Scriptures to Meditate On When You Are Suffering
When pain is overwhelming and you cannot make sense of what is happening, meditation on a single verse can hold you steady. Here are verses for different dimensions of suffering:
When You Feel Alone
When You Need Strength
When the Future Terrifies You
When Nothing Makes Sense
When You Have Lost Hope
How to Meditate on Scripture During Suffering
Suffering makes everything harder—including prayer and Bible reading. These practices are designed for the hardest days, when you have almost nothing left to give.
1. Choose One Verse
Just one. Do not try to read a chapter or even a full passage. When your heart is heavy, a single sentence from God is enough.
2. Read It Aloud
Hearing the words spoken—even in your own voice—does something different than reading silently. Speak slowly. Let the words fill the room.
3. Do Not Force Feelings
You may feel comforted. You may feel nothing. You may feel angry. All of it is okay. Meditation is not about producing the right emotion. It is about placing yourself in the presence of God and trusting that He is at work, even when you cannot feel it.
4. Repeat the Verse Like a Prayer
If you cannot find your own words, let the verse become your prayer. "Lord, you are close to the brokenhearted. Be close to me now." If even that feels like too much, a guided scripture meditation through an app like Faith can hold that space for you—gently walking you through the verse so all you have to do is listen. Praying scripture is one of the most powerful things you can do when your own words have run out.
5. Return to It
Suffering does not follow a schedule, and neither should your meditation. When the pain flares at 2 AM or in the middle of a conversation, return to your verse. Let it be the anchor that holds you.
Doubt is not the enemy of faith. Pretending is. The Bible invites you to bring your hardest questions, your deepest pain, and your most honest anger directly to God. He is not threatened by any of it. He is big enough to hold your suffering and your doubt in the same hands that hold the universe.
Conclusion
The Bible does not give us a complete explanation for why God allows suffering. But it gives us something more important: a God who suffers with us, who promises to be close when we are brokenhearted, who can bring beauty from ashes, and who guarantees that one day every tear will be wiped away.
If you are in pain today, know this: your suffering is not meaningless, your doubt is not sinful, and you are not alone. The God who hung on a cross knows exactly what it feels like to cry out "why" and hear silence. And He is the same God who walked out of the grave three days later, proving that suffering—no matter how brutal—never gets the final word.
Hold onto one verse today. Let it be your lifeline. And trust that the God who holds all things is holding you.