[7] Solomon highlights the example of Job (biblical figure) where the sufferer endures it with the thought of a glimmer of hope some day or the other reposing unflinching trust in God.
[13] Later in 1998, a Scholar[14] at the St. Peter's Pontifical Seminary, Bangalore studying under Anthony Raymond Ceresko[9] and Gnana Robinson[9] researched specifically on Job and Harishchandra focusing on the problem of suffering.
In the final analysis, Solomon looks into the possibilities of a more humane understanding of suffering overcoming Dogma and providing for repentance or rather an opportunity to set right the past and move forward.
Louis F. Knoll[18] in 1967,[25] with the cooperation of the Convention of Baptist Churches of Northern Circars who sent their learned faculty comprising W. G. Carder[26] began to function as a separate entity together with the within the campus of the newly-formed near-ecumenical Andhra Christian Theological College at its erstwhile location in Rajahmundry, giving an unprecedented impetus to the new near-ecumenical venture as the inclusion of the Ramayapatnam Seminary meant higher level theological education as well as English[18] as the medium of instruction and also the availability of the well-trained[18] faculty of the Ramayapatnam Seminary comprising Solomon, Suppogu Joseph, Louis F. Knoll, P. Joseph, K. Wilson and others who moved from Ramayapatnam to Rajahmundry to take up B.D.
During 1956-1957, Solomon was sent for postgraduate studies to the Eastern Baptist Theological Seminary,[29] King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, where he specialized in Old Testament and Biblical Hebrew language under the guidance[2] of Edward R. Dalglish, Carl H. Morgan,[30] and Walter B. S.
[14] During 1972-1973, Solomon again joined his alma mater, the United Theological College, Bangalore during the Principalship of the Systematic Theologian, Joshua Russell Chandran to study for a Biblical Hebrew language refresher course[2] studying under the Old Testament Scholars, E. C. John and G. M. Butterworth, the former being a direct student of Old Testament's Master Specialists, Gerhard von Rad and Claus Westermann at the University of Heidelberg, Germany.
Solomon's companions[3] at the College during 1972-1973 included Johanna Rose Ratnavathi, Florence,[33] Nirmala Kumari,[34] Eleanor, D. Dhanaraj, John Sadananda, J. W. Gladstone, Sydney Salins, Christopher Asir, P. Surya Prakash and others hailing from the graduate section, while D. S. Satyaranjan, Nitoy Achümi, Timotheas Hembrom, G. Babu Rao,[3] Basil Rebera and S. J. Theodore hailed from the postgraduate section.
Solomon first served as a Pastor[35] at the Waterbury Memorial Telugu Baptist Church[2] in Perambur in suburban Chennai during 1951[35]-1957 till he embarked on an overseas sojourn for his postgraduate studies.
In 1973, Solomon moved to the Andhra Christian Theological College which by then had shifted[28] in its entirety from Rajahmundry to Secunderabad and taught Old Testament and Biblical Hebrew language to aspirants hailing from the Anglican, Baptist, Congregational, Lutheran, Methodist, Pentecostal, Wesleyan and other small and indigenous Church Societies.
Solomon's other teaching colleagues included the Cantabrigian Victor Premasagar, the Wisconsin University-Scholar, R. R. Sundara Rao, the New Testament Scholar, Muriel Spurgeon Carder, the Religions Scholars, Eric J. Lott, W. P. Peery, the Systematic Theologians, Ryder Devapriam, R. Yesurathnam and others coinciding with the teaching tenures of Gali Bali, John Wijngaards and others at the St. John's Regional Seminary, the Catholic Regional Theologiate.