God and Evil — Part 2 (An Intellectual Approach)

See part 1 or the introduction.

Exhibit A — Evil Suffered

Evil suffered is “a necessary concomitant of certain kinds of good’. To be crude about it, shit happens, and it logically follows that it has to happen.

McCabe uses the analogy of a lion eating a lamb. It is obvious that the lamb suffers evil. A defect, becoming less of a lamb, is inflected by an outside agent, the lion. Why does the lion eat the lamb? Because that is what lions do—they are carnivores. It is in the nature of being a lion. The lion, in being a good lion and meeting the expectations of being a lion—as opposed to a bad lion, that is, a lion with a defect—fulfills or achieves what a lion does by eating meat. In other words, what is bad for the lamb is good for the lion. Note: “Good and bad are relative but they are not just subjective.” (emphasis mine)

Thus if God is to make a lion, and a good lion, he cannot but allow for the defect of the lamb, that is the kind of things that lions and lambs are. It is no reflection on God’s omnipotence that he cannot make good lions without allowing for damaged lambs. However omnipotent God many be he cannot compose a string quartet for three instruments or five. It belongs to being a quartet that it is for four instruments; and in a somewhat similar way it belongs to being a lion that it wants to eat lambs.

In general…you cannot make material things that develop in time without allowing for the fact that in perfecting themselves they will damage other material things. Life evolves in the course of constant interaction of things which includes the damaging and destroying of things. But every occasion of destruction is, of itself, an occasion for good for the thing that is doing the destroying—always with the single exception of the free creature which may sometimes while destroying something else be simultaneously destroying itself [see exhibit B].

God created the nature of lambs and lions. Because the nature of a lion is to be a carnivore, it follows that lambs must suffer. “But in creating good lions we can certainly say that God brings it about indirectly that there shall be evil suffered. He brings it about because it is not possible to bring about this good without allowing for the concomitant defects.” McCabe submits, “None of this…shows that God is guilty of deliberately proposing and bringing about evil.”

Ah! But you may be tempted to say that it would better not to have made the nature of lions as such, to be carnivores. Must only the plants suffer evil then? You may be even tempted to say that

…it would be better not to have any lions at all—but if you think along those lines you have to end up thinking that it would be better not to have any material world at all—and indeed…some Buddhist thinkers have reached this very conclusion. But then you do have to change the charge against my client; it is not that he made a bad world but that he made a material world at all.

Could God have made a material world with less suffering and pain?

Every defect in the material world can be linked in a rational, scientific and intelligible manner to some cause or agent. “More suffering than there need be would be suffering that had no natural cause, that was not the obverse of some good, that was scientifically inexplicable.” In other words, every defect is caused by an agent seeking its own good. To cause more suffering would the result of unnatural causes, or “inflicted by a malignant free cause such as a wicked man [see exhibit B] or a demon.”

Could God have made a material world with no suffering?

[God] could have fed the lion miraculously without damaging any lambs, and so on on throughout the order of nature. But such a world would have no reason or order within itself. Lions would not do things because they were lions, but simply because of miraculous action of God. What we mean by the miraculous action of God is indeed simply the non-presence of natural causes and explanations. A miracle is not God intervening in the world—God is always acting in the world—a miracle is when only God is acting in the world.

A world without any defects suffered, then, would be a world without any natural order in it. …a world without any natural causes, entirely consisting of miracles, would not be a natural material at all. So the people who would like [God] to have made a material world without suffering and defect would prefer him not to have have made a world subject to its own laws, an autonomous, scientifically explicable world.

Therefore, “there could not be a material world, developing according to its own laws, without evil suffered, but there most certainly could be a material human world without evil done.”

Continued in part 3 for the discussion of exhibit B.

 

God and Evil — Part 1 (An Intellectual Approach)

See the introduction to the discussion on God and evil.

An Intellectual Approach

Herbert McCabe, in chapter 3 of God Matters (this chapter alone is worth the price of the book), calls this question a philosopher’s question and a trap or impediment for many trying to enter the mystery of God.

In the style of a court case as counsel for the defense of God against his philosophical accusers, McCabe sets out to answer this philosopher’s question and concludes that the mystery of evil is not logically inconsistent with an omnipotent and good God.

(My apologies for the length of this post and for liberally quoting McCabe. Explaining philosophy is not my strength. Any choppiness in what follows is my fault alone.)

The charges:

The prisoner stands accused of wreaking all kinds of murder and mayhem, of running a world full of misery and malice. Evidence for the crimes lies all around us, and the question is whether God is really responsible, whether he should be judged guilty and perhaps whether he should get off on a plea of diminished responsibility due to unsound mind or natural ignorance.

Following the sound principle of law, we will presume God is innocent until proven guilty. As McCabe points out, it is not our job to prove God innocent, that is, “why his activities have been good.” We will stick with refuting the charges against him.

At the end of this hearing I hope you will agree that God has not been proven guilty, but I expect you will be as puzzled as I am about his innocence. In other words I hope it will remain a mystery to you why God has done what he has done; but you will at least agree that what he has done does not prove his guilt.

Before the defense begins, McCabe points out three things. One, he is not going to say God is innocent because he is not omnipotent. Two, he is not going to question the evidence. Suffering and pain are all around us. Evil is real. And third, he will not argue “that at least some of the evil in world is not caused by God but by the free actions of people. God, this defense goes, can hardly be held responsible for what men do freely, and a great deal of the awfulness of the world is due to the viciousness of men and women.” As McCabe points out in chapter 2, “all free acts are caused by God, that I do not act independently of God”, and so God cannot be let “off the hook by putting the blame on someone else.” To summarize, “God is omnipotent, the world he made is full of evils and they were not put there by human beings independently of God.”

McCabe’s argument follows three steps:

  1. Everything good in the world is brought about by God.
  2. One kind of evil, “evil suffered”, is “a necessary concomitant of certain kinds of good, and God can only be said, therefore to have brought it about in the sense that he brought about that good.”
  3. Another kind of evil, “evil done”, also known as sin, is not brought about God at all. Although God could have prevented it, it does not make him guilty by neglect.

Let’s rephrase the charge. God made a bad world when he could have made a better one. What is meant by bad?

  • Badness is a property or quality of a thing such as redness.
  • “Whenever we say something is bad we are saying that it doesn’t come up to expectations”.
  • Badness is less specific than goodness. If we say a washing machine is good (McCabe’s analogy), we know it meets our expectations of cleaning clothes. If we say a washing machice is bad, we do not know in what ways the washing machine fails to meet our expectations, i.e. does it tear the clothes, or does not rinse out the detergent, or does it electrocute the user.
  • Badness is a negative quality. It is always a defect, an absence. “It is the lack of some positive quality in a thing”.
  • Badness is the “lack of precisely that positive quality which we think is to be expected of a thing.”

McCabes writes,

We call a person bad (or in this case sometimes, evil or wicked) just because he or she doesn’t measure up to what we think we can expect of human beings. Cruelty, injustice, selfishness, are just dispositions or activities that don’t measure up to our idea of what a proper human being should be like, they are not fitting to a human being. We may find it a lot harder to be clear about what is fitting to a human being than we are about what is fitting to a washing machine, because all a washing machine has to do, so far as we are concerned, is wash clothes properly; it is an instrument that we expect to function in a certain way. People, of course, aren’t instruments in that way; they are are not just good because they do some job well, and so the whole thing is more complicated. But it does not matter how we decide this matter and it doesn’t matter whether we disagree about what makes a human being a proper human being; the thing is that if we call a man bad we mean he doesn’t measure up to whatever it is that we expect of a man.

Furthermore, since badness is a defect, it is always “parasitic on good.” In other words, “you can’t have badness unless there is at least some goodness, whereas you can have goodness without any badness.” The two are not symmetrical: badness is a defect in goodness; goodness is not a defect in badness.

There is goodness in the world, and there are defects, or badness, or evil, in things of the world.

Next, there are basically two kinds of badness or evil. Exhibit A is the “badness that happens to people and things”, or “evil suffered”. The agent that brings about the suffering is separate from the one who suffers. Exhibit B is “the evil people do”, or “evil done”. This kind of evil is “not brought about by someone outside the agent but is self-inflicted, and this is moral evil or sin.” We sympathise with the one who “has suffered evil rather than as the one who himself inflicts it.”

Continued in part 2 for the discussion of exhibit A.

 

God and Evil

I ventured out recently into the blogsphere and discovered this meme via Sarx (with some links in the chain A and the original).

  1. if the nature of god is omnipotent, benevolent, and anthropomorphic (that god is a person, who sees suffering as wrong, and can change all of it), why does god not act to relieve all suffering, or at least the greatest amount of suffering for the greatest amount of people the greatest amount of time?
  2. if you were god, and you were omnipotent and benevolent, how would you respond to suffering?
  3. if this is not the nature of god, what is the nature of god, that allows suffering in the world?
  4. if these are the wrong questions to ask, what are the right ones?

— — — — — — —

The problem of evil is probably the best argument from atheists and agnosics against a belief in God. It most definitely causes much problems for the faithful too. Why would an omnipotent and good God allow evil in the world?

There is an intellectual and an emotional response to this question. Neither are direct answers to the question, but rather a response to the mystery of evil. Mysteries about God, and evil, have no final solution. They are not problems to be solved. We can only learn from them, experience them, but in the end, we are still puzzled by them.

This discussion is rather long, and so it is has been broken into several parts. First, an intellectual approach (or jump to the second section, an emotional approach).

Battle for the Heart

Abba Anthony said:
Whoever sits in solitude and is quiet
has escaped from three wars:
those of hearing, speaking, and seeing.
Then there is only one war left in which to fight,
and that is the battle for your own heart.

— Sayings of the Desert Fathers

First, to begin even to approach an awareness of this battle for the heart, there must be some sense of solitude and silence, exteriorly and interiorly. Then, I wonder what the nature of this battle for the heart is. Is it between good and evil, for God or for the devil? Or is whether to choose to keep the gift of my life, of my existence, for myself, or give it back to God? Am I going to live as me first or God first?

A line from the Casting Crown song, “Somewhere in the Middle”, comes to mind.

Just how close can I get, Lord,
to my surrender without losing all control?

Can I retain some control and surrender this much to You? Didn’t think so. Maybe that is why Scripture calls You a jealous god? I’m glad You are. You want all of me. Thank You for your patience while I slowly move over for You to move in.

Who’s will to follow?

Help me Father to pray from the heart the prayer of Gethsemane—not my will, but Yours be done.

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