God loves all! He gave Satan temporary power over the earth until Jesus returns.
I believe that God does not allow suffering. Suffering comes from the sin that came after Adam and Eve fell from grace. God does not like us to suffer and all we have to do is ask for help and allow Him to help us. But He does not make us suffer Himself. He has His limitations in this world if we do not ask Him to help, He did give us free will after all and He does not wish to force Himself on us.
remember that in The Bible it states that Satan has little time left governing this system of things, then God will bring destruction to bad people but the good will live in everlasting life on earth.
He gave his creation free choice this is his will. Some have chosen evil and that is why suffering exists. The parable of the weeds and the wheat discusses why God allows evil to exist.
He allows it for many different reasons maybe He allowed you to suffer to strengthen your faith in Him.
They feel that God has abandoned them. They think he isn't real because they think, "If he was real, why would he let problems happen to us?".
The reason is that Muslims believe that human suffer from sin and not believing in God as when they suffer they believe in God more .
Roman Catholic AnswerSuffering is an evil: evil in the Catholic way of looking at things is not something, it is an absence of good. Like a dark is not some "thing", it is an absence of light. God allows this to bring a greater good then there would have been otherwise. There is only evil in the first place because man, and before him, an angel, chose their own will over God's will, thus frustrating God's plan. But God allows this choice to be made as he allows freedom. Without freedom, we cannot freely choose to love and serve God. In allowing us to freely love and serve Him, He must allow the opposite choice which always results in suffering.
Because they were generally uneducated and superstitious, and they had no real information as to what the cause of their suffering actually was.
Not a question but, god gave us free will, our suffering is the cause of others' mistakes.
Elie Wiesel refers to himself as God's "accuser." He feels conflicted about his faith and questions why God allows such suffering to occur during the Holocaust. This title highlights his struggle to reconcile his belief in a merciful God with the horrors he witnesses.
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Only God can take all suffering away.
The philosopher who argued that God allows evil and suffering to exist for personal growth and maturity is often associated with theodicy, particularly in the works of Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz. He posited that the existence of evil is necessary for the development of virtues such as courage and compassion, suggesting that a world with challenges leads to greater overall good. This perspective emphasizes the idea that suffering can serve a higher purpose in the moral and spiritual development of individuals.
A theodicy is a discussion of the problem of evil versus a good God. The term is mostly used among theologians or academics. It a very complex subject with many debates and few "right" answers.