At age 14 she was a beautiful, yet smaller
than her younger sisters, who did not have cystic fibrosis. Periodically
Alexis’ lungs filled up. She became
susceptible to the infections that eventually took her from us. Yet, her
ill-health made it easier for her to pay better attention to the story of creation
than other kids.
The story goes that God formed Eden as a
small temple compound where life could thrive.
Outside it was scorching barrenness and surging breakers of death. Yet, God
erected floodgates that put limits beyond which such chaos could not travel.
Still, these forces seemed maddeningly resurgent; so much so that Hebrews 2:8
says, “presently we do not see everything subject to [God]."
Biblical creationism would not have us
boast that "everything happens for a reason." Cystic fibrosis is not
part of God’s inscrutable eternal plan.
Insurance companies are wrong to call natural disasters "acts of
God.” The floodwaters of the Sea do their damage in defiance of God's creative
will. The scholar, Jon Levenson, says that scripture never explains why evil
exists; evil just needs "blasted."
We are tempted to speculate about why God
allows injustice to persist, but these partial answers will be unsatisfying
until we remember we are only in the middle of the story of creation. The story
ends with death, itself, destroyed in the lake of fire. One day there will be no more reckless Sea. Injustice
will get blasted. God will make evils like cystic fibrosis right.
And so, I tell you that it was no small
joy that as I began thanking God for his resurrection victory over death, young
Alexis reached up and took my hand. And
God saw that this was good.