How can you find God amid tragedy? Why does God allow so much suffering?
These are questions people might be asking themselves in Venezuela following the earthquakes of June 24.
Carlos Márquez, auxiliary bishop of Caracas, reflected on the mystery of suffering in an interview with ACI Prensa, the Spanish-language sister service of EWTN News. In the prelate's view, the Catholic Church plays a fundamental role in shedding light on these existential questions.
A promise to hold onto: 'We are not alone'
Márquez said it would be "an act of tremendous pridefulness" to attempt to provide answers that fully resolve this mystery. Ultimately, he noted, asking these questions is a way of "looking for someone to blame." They are questions that "paralyze us and fill us with bitterness and pain."
"We can't escape biological law; we can't escape the laws of nature. What we once thought was a curse or divine punishment, we now know to be natural processes, processes that are even necessary," he explained regarding the devastating earthquakes.
To help make sense of the tragedy, Márquez pointed to two specific factors. The first is human freedom, which, when misused, "causes suffering and pain." He referred to the collapsed buildings, many of which might have been built in unsuitable locations due to poor ground conditions or perhaps constructed without adhering to proper safety standards.
"Imprudence, whether culpable or not, always ends in tragedy. This is not caused, desired, or much less ordained by God. It's not the divine will," he remarked.
Márquez identified the second specific element in St. Paul's Letter to the Romans, where the apostle to the Gentiles wrote that creation "groans until the present and suffers the pains of childbirth" (Rom 8:22-39).
This helps us understand that nature "readjusts, evolves, and moves" as part of a process "toward the fullness promised by Jesus Christ." The auxiliary bishop explained that creation "will be subject to pain" until it is recapitulated in Christ, and we, as creatures, undergo these vicissitudes.
"Therefore, on our journey toward the fullness of living happily forever with Christ in heaven, we will encounter pain and suffering," Márquez noted.
Yet in the face of these realities, the prelate offered a reassuring promise: "Christ's promise was not that we would not suffer, nor that there would be no earthquakes, floods, or natural tragedies. Amid the pain, he promised not to abandon us. We are not alone: ??'I will be with you until the end of the world.' He promises us his companionship in the midst of pain."
The Lord "walks with us in the midst of our pain" and fulfills his promise "through his Church, among those who suffer." The sacraments and the word, he continued, comfort and heal us, and transform our hearts "so we can move forward."
God also gives us the example and intercession of the saints "so that we do not lose heart" and might feel accompanied. "When one is in great pain, when one is suffering deeply, the tragedy becomes worse when we are alone and isolated," he said.
Christian hope in the face of death and tragedy
In recent weeks, the most heart-wrenching stories have filled social media. Yet, for the most part, they share a fundamental element highlighted by Márquez: hope.
Many people are thanking God for being alive and, amid unimaginable suffering, affirming that they will live to honor their deceased loved ones and will spare no effort to discover the purpose for which God has saved them.
"If we live united with Christ in suffering, we will live with him forever in heaven. Death does not have the final word. This earthquake does not have the final word. God has the final word, which is a word of life, happiness, and eternal joy," he stated.
So, what is required of those Venezuelans who remain? Márquez answered clearly: to follow the example of all their saintly compatriots, to face adversity without asking "why," and to work so that the future may be better.

"Pain is fleeting; death is not final. United in faith, hope, and charity, with our eyes fixed on the risen Christ, we walk together in communion to overcome this tragedy," Márquez said.
"Venezuela is a land of grace; Venezuela is a land of saints. We have hope, and we will rise again. We will rise from the dust of this earthquake," he added.
Finally, he recalled the words St. John Paul II spoke at the Teresa Carreño Theater in Caracas during his second visit to the country on Feb. 10, 1996: "Venezuelans, even though the difficulties are serious and the challenges immense, your resolve must be great. Faced with a present full of uncertainty and a future full of questions, put your abilities to use with imagination and, above all, with generosity, trusting in God: God loves mankind."
As of now, the official death toll following the earthquakes stands at 4,829, while the number of injured and affected people runs into the tens of thousands.
This story was first published by ACI Prensa, the Spanish-language sister service of EWTN News. It has been translated and adapted by EWTN News English.
















