If God, Why Evil?
Naked I came from my mother's womb, and naked shall I return;
the Lord gave and the Lord has taken away; blessed be the name of the
Lord! Job 1:21
Perhaps the most popular argument against the existence
of God is based on the timeless question: "If there is truly a good God, then
why is there evil in the world?" Typically the argument runs as: "Since our
world is full of evil and a good, all-powerful God would never allow for evil,
God therefore cannot exist." This argument involves more emotion (usually anger)
than reason, but the question is important to consider. It can be phrased many
ways and a few will be considered here.
First we must consider the meaning of evil. There are
two kinds of evil: moral and physical. Moral evil is willful sin, while physical
evil is natural harm. Examples of moral evil are murder, adultery, fornication,
theft, sorcery, abortion...(Didache 2:2). Examples of physical evil are
famine, illness, natural disasters and death. Now evil is not something in
itself, but a lack of something that should be present, e.g. hatred is
the absence of love. God does not create evil since it is not a thing to
be created. Evil is an imperfection, lack or void in God's creation.
Focusing first on moral evil, the question could be
phrased as: "If there is a good God, then why did He create morally evil
people?" In considering this question, we must realize that God does not create
evil people (Gen. 1:26-31). Being all-knowing, God does knowingly create people
who will be sinners, but knowledge and control are different. God created us
with the gift of free will - the ability to willfully choose Him or reject Him.
We choose to sin - to reject God - through willful disobedience. This
rejection is a void in God's plan for us.
God wants us to love Him, but without free will, we
could not sincerely love Him. We cannot be forced to love someone. If God
created us without free will, we would be living machines and not made in
His image and likeness. God permits moral evil to the extent that He gives us
free will. Thanks to us, the moral evil in the world is the result of our
choice.
Focusing next on physical evil, the question can be
stated as: "If there is a good God, why are there pain, suffering and death in
the world?" Perhaps a harder hitting version is: "If there is a just God, why do
good people suffer?" Now suffering does serve a purpose in the material world.
Pain retards us from damaging our bodies. I do not put my hand in fire mainly
out of fear of pain. The pain of angina can warn us of an impending heart
attack. Athletes endure extreme physical hardship and suffering in order to
discipline their bodies for better performance in sports, realizing that no
pain means no gain. Even for good people such suffering is not totally
absurd.
Material things operate according to physical laws. For
example, fire operates according to the laws of thermodynamics. The same laws
which allow us to heat our homes during the winter, can allow our homes to burn
to the ground. To prevent the latter evil would require a miracle - a suspension
of physical laws. God permits physical evil to the extent that He does not
perform one miracle after another in order to stop suffering, thus causing the
ordinary to become extraordinary. Physical laws also apply the same to both good
and bad people (Matt. 5:45).
Perhaps the real question is not why does God
allow for physical evil, but why did God create us in a material world? Some
suggest that God created us in an imperfect material world so that we would not
rely on ourselves but come to love and rely on the perfect God (2 Cor 1:8-9). We
were created with a desire and hunger which can only be satisfied by God. This
void of happiness calls us to Him. In the words of St. Augustine: "...for You
have made us for Yourself, O God, and our heart is restless until it rests in
You." [Confessions I,1,1] St. Irenaeus of Lyons (190 A.D.) has
another thought:
...where there is no exertion, there is no
appreciation. Sight would not be so desirable if we did not know what a great
evil blindness is. Health, too, is made more precious by the experience of
sickness; light by comparison with darkness; life with death. In the same way,
the heavenly kingdom is more precious to those who have known the earthly one.
But the more precious it is, the more we love it; and the more we love it, the
more glorious shall we be in the presence of God. God, therefore, permitted all
these things, so that we, instructed by them all, might in future be prudent in
all things, and, wisely taught to love God, might abide in that perfect
love. [Against Heresies IV,37,7]
Suffering and sacrifice can
help us overcome our selfishness.
The Book of Job in the Bible deals with this
problem in a beautifully poetic manner. Job is a righteous, God-fearing man (Job
1:1); however, God allows Satan to inflict Job with horrible disasters and
disease to test his loyalty. Satan wants to show God that Job's faith is false
(Job 2:3-7). Under intense suffering Job argues with "friends" about the
suffering of the innocent. Towards the end God enters the debate and
responds:
Who is this that obscures divine plans with words of
ignorance? Gird up your loins now, like a man; I will question you, and you tell
me the answer! Where were you when I founded the earth? Tell me, if you have
understanding... [Job 38:2-4; NAB]
Will we have arguing with the
Almighty by the critic? Let him who would correct God give answer! [Job
40:2]
God responds by telling Job that His wisdom and power are beyond
man’s ability to understand. Also man is not in control of the universe: his
virtues alone do not ensure earthly happiness. Job humbly closes the debate with
the words:
I have dealt with great things that I do not understand;
things too wonderful for me, which I cannot know...Therefore I disown what I
have said, and repent in dust and ashes. [Job 42:2-6]
The Bible here
suggests that we should accept suffering and trust in God. Later in the Bible,
Jesus Christ responds this way on the Cross.
Now for Christians the suffering and pain of this life
can become the joy and glory of our eternal life. In the Bible, St. Paul
connects physical evil (death) with moral evil (sin):
Therefore as sin
came into the world through one man (Adam) and death through sin, and so death
spread to all men because all men sinned. [Rom 5:12; RSV]
Through
Adam's sin (i.e. original sin), we all sin and suffer death; however, God is
merciful. Christianity offers hope:
For as by a man came death, by a
man has come also the resurrection of the dead. For as in Adam all die, so also
in Christ shall all be made alive. [1 Cor 15:21-22]
Christ's death on
the Cross fills the void caused by sin. Even though we suffer pain and death for
our sins, God being sinless accepted, as a man, pain and death on the Cross for
our salvation. Love involves sacrifice, and Christ has set an example for
us:
Although He (Jesus) was a Son, He learned obedience through what
He suffered; and being made perfect He became the source of eternal salvation to
all who obey Him. [Hebrews 5:8-9]
"If any man would come after me,
let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me." [Mark
8:34; Also see 1 Peter 2:20-21; Phil 1:29]
As Christians we can hope in
eternal happiness - thanks to suffering and Jesus Christ. As St. Paul
promises:
...we are children of God, if children, then heirs, heirs of
God and fellow heirs with Christ, provided we suffer with Him in order
that we may also be glorified with Him. I consider that the sufferings of this
present time are not worth comparing with the glory that is to be revealed to
us. [Rom 8:16-18]
In our suffering we share in the suffering of
Christ (Col 1:24) so in heaven we may share in His glory (1 Peter 4:19).
Our sinful world is the unfortunate result of human
choice; not even Satan can force us to sin. Pain, suffering and death are
integral parts of the material world due to Adam's sin, but Christianity offers
hope through the suffering of Jesus Christ. Evil in this world is not a disproof
of God, but a constant reminder of our need for the perfect God of the Bible (2
Cor 1:8-9).
SUGGESTED READING: Boethius The Consolation of Philosophy, (A
Classic work dealing with the problem of human free will & an all-knowing
Creator, written in 524 A.D.)
NIHIL OBSTAT: Reverend M. James Divis, S.T.L. Censor
Librorum
IMPRIMATUR: Most Reverend Fabian W. Bruskewitz, D.D.,
S.T.D. Bishop of Lincoln
May 12, 1997
The NIHIL OBSTAT and
IMPRIMATUR are official declarations that a book or a pamphlet is free from
doctrinal or moral error. No implication is contained therein that those who
have granted the NIHIL OBSTAT and IMPRIMATUR agree with the contents, opinions,
or statements expressed.
Thanks to www.binary.net/polycarp/ source of
this article.
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