Episode

The Unbearable Catastrophe of Being: Suffering, Faith, and Meaning

Podcast
Anabaptist Theological Perspectives
Published
May 30, 2026
Duration seconds
1782
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Canonical source
https://JerryEicher.podbean.com/e/the-unbearable-catastrophe-of-being-suffering-faith-and-meaning/
Audio
https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/gym9c6726gyh3qxc/May_30_2026_08_41-hkxw2z-Optimized.mp3
JSON
/v1/public/podcasts/anabaptist-theological-perspectives-7015144/episodes/the-unbearable-catastrophe-of-being-suffering-faith-and-meaning
Markdown
/podcast/anabaptist-theological-perspectives-7015144/the-unbearable-catastrophe-of-being-suffering-faith-and-meaning.md

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Summary

Host Jerry Eicher (Anaphaptist) explores the theological landscape of suffering, inspired by Jordan Peterson’s phrase “the unbearable catastrophe of being.” In this episode he contrasts modern Christian responses, Eastern religious views, and Reformed thinking while probing why suffering exists and how it can point toward meaning.Eicher examines Christ’s participation in suffering—from Genesis and the creation of being to Gethsemane and the cross—arguing that suffering is not valuable in itself but gains weight from the destination of joy. He also discusses the Anabaptist and Amish emphasis on suffering, the psychological and communal role of hardship, and cautions against seeking suffering for its own sake.Listeners can expect reflections on scripture (including Hebrews and Paul), the role of unjust suffering, practical implications for modern life and technology, and a pastoral invitation to trust the path Christ has walked as the source of hope and meaning.