When we look honestly at suffering and evil, two very different responses emerge from major worldviews. Buddhism recognises suffering as universal and teaches a path of inner peace through detachment and letting go, aiming to reduce suffering by loosening attachment. But many forms of pain — injustice, abuse, death — cry out not just for inner peace but for justice, healing, and resolution.
Christianity agrees that suffering is real, but it goes further: the world does not only need escape — it needs rescue. In the person of Jesus Christ, God enters suffering, bears its weight, confronts evil, and offers not just comfort but redemption. At the cross, evil is taken seriously and love endures suffering on behalf of others. The resurrection then declares that suffering and death do not have the final word, promising renewal for individuals and for all creation. Rather than detaching from the world, Christianity points to a God who heals, restores, and rescues through His redemptive plan in Christ.