She was one of those...
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She was one of those five-year-old girls that beamed life. Emily Jean's father described her as "a child who had perfect love in her heart ... and it's my feeling such people don't stay on Earth very long." He spoke these words after Emily Jean was accidentally killed when a 1,000-pound roll of carpet fell on her in August 1992. It was a classic case of innocent suffering. Emily Jean's father is a psychiatrist who comforted the carpet workmen and young classmates. One of those classmates was his own daughter. She couldn't understand that her sister was gone. Sure, there was the reason for Emily's death, but no explanation why God permitted such a tragedy to happen. That's because there was none. In John 18:38, Pilate asked, "What is truth?" A reasonable answer for people of Christian faith is to "respect the mystery." God doesn't always provide watertight explanations when tragedies happen. He does provide faith, and faith's job is to respect the mystery of innocent suffering. It is not right to demand answers from God. It is our privilege to "respect the mystery" of God's grace amidst life's unfairness. We will never know the full story of why Pilate caved into fear during his opportunity to find truth. We'll never understand why a 1,000-pound carpet snuffed out Emily Jean's young life. We just hang on three words of truth in John 19:30 where Jesus said, "It is finished." We "respect the mystery" that those words mean peace and promise through a faith which tramples over fear. -- Webster
