I'm pretty much the same way. I don't believe that God is "torturing" me with kidney failure. Everything happens for a reason even if we don't like it, and I don't blame God (or anyone for that matter) for me getting sick. I actually feel my faith has gotten stronger since this happened, and I've learned so much and no longer take life for granted. As for evil in the world, the way I've always looked at it is God created free will, and we are not robots. We can chose to do right, or we can choose to do wrong. I try to do the right thing, but Lord knows I'm not perfect and I'm just as much a sinner as anyone, even though I don't want to do bad things, but I'm human. I have however had some friends who are big into "faith healing" question my faith because I trust my doctors and my dialysis machine. I don't dislike them or anything, but I have tried to explain that trusting medical professionals and treatment doesn't make me any less of a Christian, and I think they look at it a little differently now. I believe God has given those medical professionals the knowledge and wisdom to do what they do. Adam
I wonder how suffering endstage renal failure affects people's religious beliefs or the absence of them? For me, despite my extensive religious education, by the time I was 12 I decided it was self-contradictory to assert that a world created and governed by an infinitely powerful and infinitely good God could have so much evil in it not obviously traceable to human responsibility, so when I developed renal failure, that seemed to be just one more horror in a world whose only meaning was what humans try to give it. But I know other apparently rational people who believe firmly in God but try to explain away the evil in the world by various devices, such as retribution for the sin of Adam; Gnosticism; Manicheanism; etc. Many believers, though, don't seem to take the existence of evil in the world seriously enough as a challenge to their beliefs, and I wonder if having something truly evil happen to them, such as renal failure, shakes them out of their faith? Or, conversely, does it inspire faith in some people who lacked it before renal failure? Many believers I know seem to become even more committed to their faith when confronted by a disaster like kidney disease. What have other people experienced?
. Interestingly, the idea that the dead person's consciousness continues after death was a main tenet of the Ancient Egyptian religion, which both the first Christians and the early Jews emphatically rejected.
He created a perfect world ...people messed that up.