While waiting for the bus yesterday, I overheard (wasn't trying - but due to his volume, impossible to avoid) a guy on his cell phone talking to someone about his likely imminent dismissal from his employment.
But he then went on to say that he had full confidence that God would take care of him, and he wasn't worried at all about finding new employment.
Then I got home, watched the news, and found out that 4 million Kenyans are in danger of starving to death because of a year-long drought there.
So I got to thinking - how exactly does God set priorities?
The guy at the bus stop is not the first Christian I've heard express his confidence that God chooses to intervene and help in the lives of individual believers. He saves them from car wrecks, he helps them find jobs, he lends some sort of invisible emotional support to help them cope with the death of a child, and so on.
On the other hand, millions of people suffer excruciating pain for months or years before finally dying covered in mud with flies crawling on them - no relief from God in sight.
Why does God help one middle-aged guy who's never been hungry in his life find a new job in time so that he doesn't miss his $3000 mortgage payment, but not send a little rain to help a land where millions of people are already living in misery and filth?
If he's going to intervene in human affairs, why do so much in already-wealthy countries, and ignore the 3rd world?
Honestly, I'm not trying to be snarky - I'm genuinely interested in how true-blue believers reconcile this apparent paradox.