The Book of Job shows what happens when one clings to "Why?" In the end, Job doesn't really receive as satisfying answer to his question. Rather than asking "Why?", it's usually more important to grapple with "that."
This or that really happened. What now? It's okay that you can't make sense of it. I am of the view that in fallen and badly broken world, there is often no sense be made of things. And so, it's very often the case that any meaning you assign is an overlay, an imposition, a figment of your imagination. This especially true when trying to determine someone else's intentions. Most of the time, we don't know our own reasons why!
Most of the Book of Job consists of either Job's friends trying to answer Job's "Why?" or Job rejecting their facile answers (i.e., God is punishing you because of something you did) even as he continues imploring God. In the end, the divine answer Job receives can be summarized by this passage from Isaiah:
For my thoughts are not your thoughts, nor are your ways my ways . . . For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways, my thoughts higher than your thought (Isa 55:8-9)When reality is overwhelming, disorienting, bad, or even traumatic, "Why?" is a natural response. Like a lot of natural responses, the Spirit leads us beyond that. In his lovely little book Prayerfulness, Robert L. Wicks inists that "until we can let go of this question ["Why?"] and find new ways of relating to God and the event, moving on and moving deeper in our life is almost impossible" (90).
Perhaps the most pagan way of relating to God is to think that when something bad happens God is punishing you and when good things happen it is because God is pleased with you. God is not capricious. God is probably never the formal cause of what happens to you. Perhaps sometimes He might be the efficient cause. God is certainly the final cause of all things. If we're willing to let go of "Why?", God can and will make amazing things happen. If you love God and trust Him, all things can work together for your good.
Trust is earned. Trusting someone, even God, involves a risk. Most of the time the risk isn't whether or not things will work out for the better or maybe just be okay. Rather, the risk is not having things work out the way you want them to. What we often want is for bad things to just go away. Far from being an evasion of reality, Christian faith is a deep engagement with reality. Hope is realized by facing reality squarely.
More than God's pleasure or displeasure, I think the worst temptations are not to believe in God or to believe God is indifferent toward you. Of these two, the latter is worse than the former. We are not to put God to the test, which, scripturally, refers to trying to force God to do what you want Him to do. Trusting God when reality seems arrayed against you, which requires submission to His holy will and realzing that it isn't just all going to magically go away, is necessary. This means having no idea how this is going to work out or how I am going to make peace with this and imploring God, surrendering to Him.
As Eugene Peterson wrote: "When nothing we can do makes any difference and we are left standing around empty-handed and clueless, we are ready for God to create."





