lunamoth
Episcopalian
If God is good why is there evil in the world?
Well for someone like myself, I don't believe in evil. I believe people make dumb decision and when pushed to take responsibility claim evil over being just a dumb human.If God is good why is there evil in the world?
I'd have to agree with Noctuary on this one except to say that evil can be fairly ascribed as a descriptive to certain heinous acts. In that regard the world has much evil. But the bible actually does not help to define evil, to the contrary, I would go as far to say it makes an excuse for evil. For one can commit it and then repent with all forgiven.If God is good why is there evil in the world?
Maybe without evil there could be no good.
If God is good why is there evil in the world?
Maybe G!d is not omnipotent. Maybe evil is a matter of perspective. Maybe without evil there could be no good. Maybe evil gives the opportunity for growth and is therefore good.
Well for someone like myself, I don't believe in evil. I believe people make dumb decision and when pushed to take responsibility claim evil over being just a dumb human.
There is no other road by which such goal might be reached, by which the freewill of the many should reunite into the one great Nature and the one great Law, save a process in which experience should be garnered, in which evil should be known as well as good, failure as well as triumph.
Tell me yourself, I challenge your answer. Imagine that you are creating a fabric of human destiny with the object of making men happy in the end, giving them peace and rest at last, but that it was essential and inevitable to torture to death only one tiny creature—that baby beating its breast with its fist, for instance—and to found that edifice on its unavenged tears, would you consent to be the architect on those conditions? Tell me, and tell the truth."
Hi Luna and a Happy New Year!! I have not seen much of you lately on these threads, which is a real shame as you are one of the people here that has the ability to make me think in ways that make me a more complete person. I do hope all is well with you.
I'd have to agree with Noctuary on this one except to say that evil can be fairly ascribed as a descriptive to certain heinous acts. In that regard the world has much evil. But the bible actually does not help to define evil, to the contrary, I would go as far to say it makes an excuse for evil. For one can commit it and then repent with all forgiven.
tao
there is evil because we collectively allow it to exist...
...sins of ommission, maybe?
...
and out the middle classes come, with their cheap forgiveness, accepting his trite confession, and maybe we'll even see him on TV again...
it worked for Pete Townsend...
I see no evil. You gotta break eggs to make an omelet.
Evil to me is simply defined as something we perceive to be evil from our point of view.
Hi Lunamoth —
Because man was created with free will.
Pax tecum,
Thomas
Indeed. “Good” is a concept which can only exist if the concept of “evil” exists. If there is one, there is the other. When something / somebody / some action is described as “good”, one is making a comparative statement to the alternative, which is “evil” (or bad).
s.
The question is if God is omnibenevolent, then why does evil exist? I think it is a mistake to assume one is diametrically opposed to the other. It seems to point the finger back at God, when evil is a human characteristic (assuming your definition of evil if moral-based). Evil is a perversion of that which is good, else we could not define evil at all. There would be no basis to form an opinion of what is evil and what is good.
Evil is a consequence of humans having the freewill to choose. But without freewill, there would not be the capacity to love, for love implies a choice.
But then the question is, does God have a freewill? And if so, does He have the capacity to choose evil as well? You could give the pat answer that God is good because it is in His nature, but then you would have to understand what His nature really is.
As Creator of the Universe, He created all the laws set forth for us to function, much in the way an inventor devises a way in which he invention will operate within a certain set of parameters for optimum functioning. If it was God's intention to create a being that will have some kind of relationship with Him, then some of His own attributes would have to be infused into that being. So it would be a matter of creating a being of His own image (not in some anthromorphological image, but having certain attributes to communicate, interact, and commune with God). Making a carbon copy of Himself would do no good, if that being could not be automonous in it's thinking. All you would have is a mimic of the real God and without choice would be doing things in perfect will of God, but no real thought of doing it. (It would rather be like the pre-ordained bride picked out for Eddie Murphy in "Coming to America" who stood on one leg and barked like a dog on command).
Instead, God opted for a being who could choose to love God back...or not. He needed only one commandment to test his invention out, and yes, it worked...too good. The rest is history, both good and evil. While it was God's plan that man choose, it wasn't God's plan for him to choose poorly.
If we are going to learn what the nature of God is, we need to discover what are the operating parameters for man. For it is within those parameters that we can find an evermore perfect love toward God and toward others. So our quest is seeking the good choices among the bad choices available. Unfortunately, there are so many bad choices, that it's hard not to be infuenced by them. We are all affected one way or another by both good and bad options set before us. I believe that as we grow older we will gravitate in varying degrees between better choices and worse choices.
But in Christianity, and I suppose some of the other religions, we are promised that God's Spirit is there to guide us and empower us toward the better choices. With the Spirit of God, we can break the habits and addictions that can hold us to those bad choices and attitudes. And through His Spirit, we discover the power of His Love and how that Love can help us love others. It is a process that God makes avaliable if we are willing to abide in Him and obey His commandments. Obediance does not have to be a drag. Obedience is seeing the benefit of operating within the parameters that will allow us to function as God had planned. We become good be doing good. We form good habits by doing good habits. We turn the evil intentions back into good intentions. Wrong attitudes into right attitudes.
Wow Dondi, Excellent excellent answer. Thank you! I really can't add anything to that but to say you've expressed how I see it much better than I ever could. I don't think it would satisfy the anti-theist, but then what ever could? In his book Evil and the Justice of God, NT Wright suggests that a deep and time-honored tradition in Christianity is to treat the question of theodicy as almost a mystery, there is no logical answer from the perspective of humans and while attempts are inevitible, and can yield fruit, at the end of the day the only answer is silence.
One other great thing brought out by Wright in this book is the importance of forgiveness in addressing the practical problem of evil in this world. He suggests that God's forgiveness actually heals evil not only in this life, but heals all the evil ever done in a real and tangible way. In the act of forgiveness, the victim is freed from the evil as much as the perpetrator is released from his sin.