When people do good, the blessings have not yet arrived, but the disasters are far away; when people do evil, the blessings have been far away even though the disasters have not yet arrived.

Why doesn't God reward good people?

In 1963, a girl named Mary Benny wrote to the Chicago Tribune, because she couldn't understand why she helped her mother bring the baked cookies to the table, and all she got was "Okay. Child" praise; and David (her brother), who does nothing and only knows how to make trouble, gets a cookie instead.

She wanted to ask the omniscient Mr. Siller Kuster: Is God really fair? Why she often sees some good kids like her being forgotten by God at home and at school.

Seeler Kuster, host of the Chicago Tribune's children's section, has received more than a thousand letters from children about "why doesn't God reward the good and punish the bad" for more than a decade . Whenever he opened such a letter, his heart was very heavy, because he did not know how to answer these questions.

Just when he didn't know how to answer the letter from little girl Mary, a friend invited him to the wedding. Maybe he should be grateful for this wedding in his life, because it was at this wedding that he found the answer, and this answer made him famous overnight.

Siller Kuster recalled the wedding this way: After the priest presided over the ceremony, the bride and groom exchanged rings, maybe they were immersed in happiness, maybe they were too excited. In short, when they exchanged rings, the two accidentally put the ring on each other's right hand.

The pastor saw this scene and reminded humorously: the right hand is perfect enough, I think you'd better use it to dress up the left hand.

Siller Kuster said it was the pastor's humour that gave him a break. The right hand becomes the right hand, which is very perfect in itself, and there is no need to wear accessories on the right hand. Aren't the virtuous people so often overlooked because they are already perfect?

Later, Cyler Kuster came to the conclusion: God makes the right hand the right hand, which is the highest reward for the right hand. Similarly, God makes the good man good, which is the highest reward for the good man.

After discovering this truth, Syler Kuster was so excited that he immediately wrote back a letter to Mary Benny with the title of "God made you a good boy is the highest reward for you". After the letter was published in the "Chicago Tribune", it was reprinted by more than 1,000 newspapers and periodicals in the United States and Europe within a short period of time, and they were republished every year on Children's Day.

Not long ago, a Chinese found this letter somewhere. After reading it, he left a message on the website saying:

There is a saying in China that "evil will be rewarded with evil, and good will be rewarded with good. We used to be puzzled by the lingering rewards of the wicked. Now I finally understand, because "to let the wicked become wicked is God's punishment for them." When

people are good, the blessing has not yet come, but the disaster has been far away;

Guess you like

Origin http://10.200.1.11:23101/article/api/json?id=326993728&siteId=291194637