Hi Johnny - a lot of what you say I agree with. And ultimately I guess we’re all in the dark, seeking for the answer to the mystery of evil. And I also hold my hand up to a childish naiveté: bad stuff = not God, good stuff = God. The best theodicy I have at the moment is: universalism + FWD + cosmic warfare + vale of soul making + subversion of evil + open theism. I find that the removal of any one of those elements results in a less good God
I’ll add some more thoughts (let me know if I get too wordy or hog the thread):
Cindy, Johnny - totally agree. It is very hard to see any theodicy working without the ultimate redemption of all things (including animals and angels).
Well, I think I have one … (My arrogance is like a shield of steel)
But we do know that God cannot change the past: because if He could then He already would have and nothing bad would ever have happened, for a God who retains the power to intervene must, if omnibenevolent, intervene every time to erase evil - not that that would solve any ethical dilemmas since the suffering would already have occurred prior to His intervention, thus He would only rob us of the meaningfulness of free choice without removing the suffering (and, indeed, if predestination was not true, then He may have to run and re-run history many times, thus only compounding the suffering for no end moral benefit)! Example: I do sin a which results in suffering b. Even if God rewinds history to stop a, b has already been felt (both by a being and by God in His omniscience). If God then lets freedom run its course again b has yet another chance to occur - and it might - thus God’s time intervention has only served to double the suffering whilst removing any meaningful sense of freedom for me (I never had the choice to proceed with a). Thus, whatever greater good is redeemed out of evil and suffering by universals reconciliation it cannot be made so that the suffering was not: God may bring good out of evil, but the evil still happened and was bad.
To push further: Simple foreknowledge, IMHO, makes moral freedom meaningless (since we don’t have the power to choose an alternative or actualise an alternative consequence), presents us with the intractable moral problem of a God who chose to directly actualise all evil that has ever been or will be, and leads to major pastoral difficulties (see below). A Calvinistic predestinarian God is little more than a puppet-master, with even worse moral issues, and a Molinist middle-knowledge solution has philosophical difficulties regarding how that foreknowledge of future free actions are grounded, and with its conflict with libertarian free will and the reality of alternatives – not too mention suffering from the same pastoral issues and moral problems as Arminianism. It also robs God of the virtue of adventure and intelligence since He’s just running through a script – you don’t need *creative solutions *to problems (wisdom) when you’re just following a foreknown course. On top of all that, I’d contend that a God who interacts with time, gets frustrated, changes His mind, has to test people to see what they would do, is sometimes surprised, and has to engage in genuine struggle with the forces of evil is a more prominent biblical theme than an impassive, static Hellenic deity …
A Pastoral difficulty (taken from Greg Boyd’s God of the Possible):
A young woman is dating a young man. She wants to know if God will bless their marriage and so prays earnestly for wisdom and guidance in this area. She is granted clear assurance to go ahead and marry (fill in whatever would convince you that God had answered her prayer for guidance, assuming that God does grant people wisdom). Later, the man she marries turns abusive. If foreknowledge is true then God is directly responsible for setting the young woman up with someone who He knew was going to be abusive. The only solutions are: God predestinates all things, including evil actions, for a greater good; or God doesn’t give people guidance on anything; or God doesn’t have foreknowledge; or God is not good.
Time and God’s bounding by it are really tricky philosophical issues. My very simplistic take on it is that God must be bound to time in some way in order that: a) He can’t change the past (see above); b) He can think (thinking is a process that requires movement from a to b, thus time); c) He can interact with us (a timeless being couldn’t really interact with and in time AFAIK).
Even with foreknowledge His interactions with humanity would be contingency plans – for we sin and fail His perfect will for our lives (which He forgives and redeems). Unless one is going to go down a Calvinist road I can see no other way than God working by having options: if pog does a, I’ll do b (holding every possible alternative in mind at once). And again, I think the biblical narrative points towards salvation primarily in terms of a recue plan, not in terms of the outworking of something ideally hoped for (unless one is arguing that sin, suffering and evil are something God wanted?)
Obviously there is no way of holding to a cosmic warfare model without accepting some form of trans-human non-God free willed agents. Belief in something like demon possession is not necessary (cosmic warfare not to confused with spiritual warfare), but a belief in evil *free willed *agents affecting the physical universe is. Though I fail to see why this cannot be a metaphysical possibility given that God is an unembodied mind which can interact with matter, and (depending upon your understanding of the mind-body problem) possibly so are human minds. And again I’d point to the major biblical motif here (though also accepting the fact that satan/ Leviathan/ principalities and powers are also sometimes metaphors for institutional or systemic evil).