Just last week, Stephen Colbert gave an interview in which the depth of his Catholic faith was on pretty clear display. Discussing the trauma that he experienced as a young man — the deaths of his father and two of his brothers in a plane crash — he told the interviewer how, through the ministrations of his mother, he had learned not only to accept what had happened but actually to rejoice in it.

“Boy, did I have a bomb when I was 10; that was quite an explosion. … It’s that I love the thing that I wish most had not happened.”

Flummoxed, his interlocutor asked him to elaborate on the paradox. Without missing a beat, Colbert cited J.R.R. Tolkien.

“What punishments of God are not gifts?”

What a wonderful sermon on the salvific quality of suffering! And it was delivered, not by a priest or bishop or evangelist, but by a comedian about to take over one of the most popular television programs on late night.

But what particularly intrigued me was the reference to Tolkien, which was culled, not from “The Lord of the Rings” or “The Hobbit,” but from a letter that the great man wrote to an inquirer, who had wondered whether Tolkien took death with sufficient spiritual seriousness in his literary work.

Like Colbert, Tolkien had suffered enormous trauma as a young man. His father died in 1896, when Tolkien was only 3, and his mother Mabel took him and his younger brother back to England (the family had moved to South Africa for economic reasons).

Upon their return to her hometown of Birmingham, Mabel decided to become a Roman Catholic, a move that was met with enormous opposition on the part of her family, who essentially disowned her and left her in destitution. During this terrible period, Tolkien’s mother turned to the priests of the Birmingham Oratory, who cared for her needs both spiritual and financial and who took a keen interest in her fatherless children.

In 1904, Tolkien and his brother became orphans when their mother died of diabetes. Years later, the famous author mused that his mother was a kind of martyr, since she had been in effect hounded to death for her decision to become a Catholic and to raise her sons in the faith.

Frightened, alone and adrift, the boys were taken in by Father Francis Xavier Murphy, a priest of the oratory. The kindly man, whom Tolkien always referred to affectionately as “Father Francis,” became a father figure, instructing the young men in matters both sacred and secular and teaching, as Tolkien would later put it, the meaning of “charity and forgiveness.”

Tolkien named his eldest son for the priest, and many have suggested that there is a fair amount of Father Murphy in Gandalf and other wisdom figures in the master’s oeuvre. It was assuredly Father Francis who taught the young Tolkien, who had endured more trials than any child ought to endure, that “all of God’s punishments are gifts.”

But where had the priest learned that lesson?

The legendary John Henry Newman, who at the time had just become a Roman Catholic, thereby excluding himself from the institutions of British society, had established the Birmingham Oratory in the mid-19th century. When he set up the oratory in the industrial city of Birmingham, Newman was passing through a real “Lenten” period, for he was excoriated as a traitor by the Anglican establishment and looked upon with suspicion by Catholics.

In time, Newman would reemerge as a cultural leader within British society, and his oratory would become a center for Catholic evangelism in England. But this would happen only through Newman’s dark night experiences.

What his Oratorian disciples, including Father Francis, would have taken in is the lesson that “punishments” often turn out to be precious gifts.

What this chain of influences teaches us — and here I come to the point of this essay — is that God’s providence is a mysterious and wonderful thing. Were it not for John Henry Newman’s establishment, through much suffering, of the Birmingham Oratory, there would never have been a Father Francis Xavier Murphy, and if there had never been a Father Murphy, the young Tolkien boys might easily have drifted into unbelief or spiritual indifference, and if J.R.R. Tolkien had not taken in the lessons he learned from his mentor, he would never have shared the insight about God’s gift that brought such comfort to a young Stephen Colbert in his moment of doubt and pain.

One of the most potent insights of the spiritual masters is that our lives are not about us; that they are, in fact, ingredient in God’s providential purposes, part of a story that stretches infinitely beyond what we can immediately grasp.

Why are we suffering now? Well, it might be so that, in St. Paul’s language, we might comfort someone else with the same consolation we have received in our suffering.

And that someone might be a person who has not even been born. St. John Paul II commented that, for people of faith, there are no coincidences, only aspects of God’s providence that we have not yet fully understood.

The line that runs from Newman to Murphy to Tolkien to Colbert was not dumb chance, a mere coincidence; rather, it was an instance of the slow but sure unfolding of the divine plan.