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The Holocaust, the Tsunami & the
Goodness of God
I. Blaming God
- What is the problem?
The basic problem is that it seems hard to see how a perfectly
good God, who can do everything, and knows all our actions, could
be responsible for a creation in which there is so much suffering
and so much human malice and cruelty.
- The problem looked somewhat different from the ancient world
almost until the17th century. In those days, most people, perhaps
almost everyone in the European world believed in a God who
is omnipotent, benevolent, and omniscient. So they knew there
must be a solution to the problem of evil, and they tried to
find one. Not very successfully.
- With the rise of science, and of a particular kind of philosophical
uncertainty, it was no longer thought to be at all obvious that
such a God exists at all; and the evil in the world at least
counts against the existence of such a God. Unless one can solve
the problem of evil, there is no good reason to believe in God
at all. There might simply be no solution, no meaning to the
suffering and disasters in the world.
- The Less Ambitious Project
There are two ways of trying to cope with ‘The Problem of Evil’
- The more ambitious one is to explain precisely why God should
allow each and every instance of evil of which we are aware.
One might try to show, for instance, that out of every evil
comes a greater good. But, this is at least not obvious, and
may not even be true.
- The less ambitious: try to show that there are no good grounds
for saying that a God who creates this world cannot be a good
God. This is what I shall try to defend.
To ‘cope’ with the problem of evil is not to be comfortable with
it, or to find tragedy not really so very disturbing. Rather it
is to understand why such tragedy need not make belief in God intellectually
dishonest.
- When is Someone to Blame for what Happens?
The general idea is to try to understand reasonably precisely
under what conditions we are justified in blaming someone for
something (that’s the vague was of putting it, for the moment);
think those through carefully in a non-religious context; and
only then discuss whether there are any good grounds for blaming
God for the way the world is, or what is the meaning of it all.
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A
- What happens is bad, all things considered
- The person was the cause of what happened
- They knew how things would turn out
- They knew they could have done better
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B
- The world is an evil world all things considered
- God created the world
- God knew how the world would turn out
- God knows he could have created a better world
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In short, we should blame someone only if they did wrong, and
knew they could and should have done better. All four requirements
have to be met if someone is to be held blameworthy. How, then,
does this apply to God and our world? Must we blame God for the
way things are?
II. Is this a bad world
- Something going wrong
In which of the following has something gone wrong: a tidal wave;
an earthquake, someone dying, a genetic mutation. Can something
be evil unless something has ‘gone wrong’?
- Various Points of View
Take, for example, a predatory animal eating another animal; a
lioness killing a gazelle, for instance
- From the point of view of the lioness’s cubs
- From the point of view of the lioness
- From the point of view of the gazelle?
- From the point of view of the herd of gazelles?
- From the human point of view?
- From an ecological point of view?
- From God’s point of view?
Change the examples: instead of lion, take a malaria parasite,
a flu virus, non-vegetarian humans, cows, a gardener cutting flowers
for a bouquet. Try to say exactly why you think of each of these
examples in the way you do.
- An Overall Assessment
To assess things, or states of affairs, or actions as good or
bad all things considered is not at all a simple matter. One needs
to sort out:
- What is the correct point of view from which the questions
under should be considered?
- Which features are relevant (eg. that the action was performed
on a Saturday, that someone’s feelings were hurt, that the
dog was hungry)? How does one settle what things at least
need to be considered?
- revealing examples:
- Is Earth as it was 15 billion years ago (before there
were any animals) better or worse overall than the moon,
or Mars
- Is Earth as it was after the evolution of human beings
better or worse than it was before there were any humans?
Notice how difficult it is to give a definite answer to this question
about the world as a whole (still less, one might think, about the
Universe as a whole) It is all too easy to make snap judgements
depending on our mood at the time, or on the news at the time, or
our grasp of history, and so on.
Obviously, if the universe is not bad overall, then there is nothing
for which God could be blamed; if it is bad overall, then it could
be, but need not yet be, fair to blame Go (if there is a God). The
jury would still be out, so to speak.
III. Could God have done
better?
- Can God do everything?
The quick definition of God’s omnipotence, suitable for children
who need to learn to distinguish it from omniscience, is that
God is omnipotent because God can do everything. Needless to say,
perhaps, the matter is not as simple as that makes it sound
- Here is a simple list of things which God obviously cannot
do: walk, sing, speak English, feel tired, catch a cold, die.
(Note: I am not here talking about what the man Jesus, who
is God, could do because he was human.) Why not? Because,
at least on the ordinary belief we have about God, God does
not live in a world of time and space, with a body, arms,
legs, tongue, organs, etc. So he cannot perform those activities
which require such things.
- Here is a list of rather more controversial things which
perhaps God cannot do: can God feel irritated, angry, delighted,
encouraged, loving? The answer to these questions depends
on two things:
- Do all emotions involve bodily changes?
- are any/all of the items in this list emotions?
- And finally a list of things which we might want to say
that God both can and cannot do: hear, speak, cease to be
angry, make things, remember, change. The reasons here are
the same ones as those above under a) and b); but perhaps
we might want to say that although God cannot literally do
these things, there is a sense in which he can.
There is a neat little point made by Thomas Aquinas; in the light
of all the above considerations, it might be better to say not that
God can do everything, but that God can do whatever a being like
God can do. Well, this is better; but it is also almost totally
uninformative. So where next? Aquinas suggests that God can do everything
that can be done. Is this any more helpful?
- How do we distinguish between what is possible, and
what is not.
- The easy bit. We know that if something has actually happened,
then it must be possible for it to happen.
- The slightly less easy bit. To some extent we can know what
else is possible by using our knowledge of the existing state
of things. So, we know that John could have gone to the pictures
yesterday; that I could grow begonias in my garden but not giant
cactus; that I could change my shoes before supper; that we
could clone a human being. In short, we to some extent understand
what the laws of physic and chemistry and biology are, and what
would be compatible with them.
- The more difficult bit: do we know the limits of what the
laws of nature will allow? Could we breed a naturally tartan
sheep? Could a person be disassembled in one place, and reassembled
somewhere else -- as in ‘Beam me up, Scottie’? Could someone
learn to remember everything that ever happened to them?
- The best possible world?
Well, then: could God using the laws of physics abd biology as
they are produce a world with selected improvements? For instance,
no flash floods, tsunamis, handicapped children, or disease? Hume
thought that the answer to this key question was obvious: if God
is omnipotent, he could do any or all of these things: so why
doesn’t he?
- But, though it is easy to imagine a world like ours with just
a few selected improvements, it is not so clear that such a world
would be possible. The notion of what is possible is very difficult
to grasp: and we have got so used to saying that God can do all
things without really thinking about what that might mean. Possibilities
come in packages, as it were: you can’t have humans without having
water, an atmosphere without gravity, and so on. Hence some difficult
questions:
- Chaos theory tells us that even a very small difference in the
basic facts of physics would have enormously different effects.
If so, you couldn’t ‘fine-tune’ the universe to produce just a
few selected improvements. Put another way: God, in choosing to
create a universe like this has chosen not to create a different
one.
- But perhaps God could have created a totally different universe?
Perhaps so, but if it is very different, would it be similar enough
to ours for us to ask whether it is better or worse? Think of
how one might try to answer the question ‘Is Pythagoras’s theorem
better or worse than Arsenal?
Hence a conclusion, perhaps: God can’t just tinker with this universe:
even tiny tinkerings would make it very very different. But if God
made a totally different universe, it might be so different that
we could not say if was better overall than this one. In which case
it would be very hard to say that God could obviously have done
better, could have created a better universe than this. But if we
can’t say that, then we have no justification for blaming God for
the way things are – unless no universe at all is clearly better
than this one…. You can’t blame anyone for doing the best that can
be done.
IV. Our fault or God´s?
- Human Malice
Whether we can justifiably blame God for natural disasters – the
Tsunami, disease, handicap, flash floods – is one question. Maybe,
if the arguments given in Lecture III are all right, these natural
misfortunes don’t give us good grounds for blaming God.
But how about the Holocaust, 9/11, terrorist bombings, cruelty,
slavery, other forms of systemic injustice? Did an omniscient God
not know what he was unleashing in creating humans?
- Is God responsible for what we do?
- Can God be defended by saying that it is we ourselves who
are responsible for our malicious actions, therefore not God?
There are two possible reasons for saying that this way of
defending God is insufficient:
- Since God is the first cause of all things and events,
his causation is somehow involved even in our free action.
Yes, but perhaps not in such a way that we could say that
in us God sins, for instance. Exactly why not is a more
complicated issue, though.
- But if God knew what we would do before he created us,
then he surely is responsible for the situation in which
we in fact do behave in these horrific ways.
So the alternative way of defending God would have to be that even
an omniscient God somehow didn’t know how human behaviour would
turn out. Is this possible?
- Two ways of defining freedom
- A person does something freely if they do it because they
want to, and if they do it because of what they think they
are doing.
- The first bit of this excludes external force; but there
are unclear cases: addiction; psychologically compulsive
behaviour; behaviour under threat. The second part of
this excludes things done in sleepwalking, or in ignorance
of the true facts – turning on a light and blowing up
the house because there was a gas leak, for instance.
The person turned on the light freely, but did not freely
blow up the house.
- Note: on this version of freedom, it is not required
that the person could have done something else at the
moment of choosing; she might, for instance, not be able
on this occasion to act ‘out of character’.
- A person does something freely only if they were fully able
to do something else at the moment of choosing.
- This excludes even actions performed in line with our
character, if we could not there and then have done anything
else. As a result much of what we do would be unfree on
this definition.
- Actions resulting from addiction, psychological compulsion,
irreversible habit, do not count as free.
- Sometimes we use the word ‘free’ in the first way, sometimes
in the second. Is the first compatible with moral responsibility?
Is the second ever true of anyone?
- Freedom and Predictability
Can we ever predict what someone will freely do? Can we ever know
what someone would do if they were ever in such and such circumstances?
The answers to these questions are not altogether clear: but perhaps
- Obviously, we can know of actions which people freely do
– but we can know this because they have done them
- We might often be able to predict what people do freely,
in the first sense – that is to say, spontaneously but in
character
- But it seems impossible to predict what people would freely
do in the second sense – all options still open at the time
of choice.
- God’s accountability for our free actions
- God, being omniscient, would know all that we in fact do;
and could ‘predict’ everything we will do ‘freely’ in the
first sense
- God could not know in advance, so to speak, what we would
freely do in the second sense of ‘free’So God is accountable
for what human beings spontaneously do, and hence for the
harm and malice of our behaviour in those cases; but not for
things which we do when we could equally well have done something
else.
Once again, then, the conclusion might be that whether God could
be blamed for creating humans will depend on whether freedom in
either of its two sense is sufficiently valuable as to outweigh
the bad consequences.
- Is God to blame?
It seems to me that there is no good reason to suppose that God
knew that it was possible to create a world which would have been
overall better than this one. In that case, God cannot be blamed.It
therefore follows that in that sense ‘the problem of evil’ is
solved; it is not intellectually dishonest to believe that an
infinitely good, omnipotent and omniscient God could have created
a world like ours.
- Some quick questions and answers:
Q: Does ‘absolving God’ make sufferings easier
to bear?
A: No. At best it might make it a bit easier
not to add to the suffering by fuelling resentment against God.
Q: Why is there suffering in the world, then?
A: The answer to this is in one way very simple:
suffering is inevitable in a world like ours; natural events
Those things are just what happens in a world which evolves in
the way that ours has evolved. So we can give an answer, different
in each instance, which explains how the suffering came about.
Q: But what is the meaning, the point of suffering?
A: I think the question is asking for a kind of
answer which simply is not there.
- The passion and death of Jesus
- We can in one way explain why Jesus suffered: he was politically
dangerous to Pilate, and religiously threatening to at least
one influential group of Jews.
- But the attempt to ask for its meaning leads to some unacceptable
ways of thinking: God as a kind of Shylock, in one way or
another needing his son to suffer; or a retributive theory
of God’s justice.
- So I suggest that it is a mistake to see the sufferings
of Jesus as in themselves valuable, or redemptive.
- In another sense, though we can explain the sufferings of
Jesus: they came about because of his fidelity to his divine
mission, his dedication to the truth even in those dangerous
circumstances, his obedience to the Father who wants not sacrifices
but a pure heart.
- Finding God in suffering
Various solutions offered: Contrast two ‘solutions’ in Romans
Chapter 8.
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