Oh, great. Thanks, Iacchus, for making this thread jump the shark. Godwin's Law strikes again, just when the discussion was getting good.
Let's try some CPR.
I think heaven is irrelevant to the OP, thus my question,
Who said anything about heaven?
To which Diogenes replied,
The fundies, who say to get there, you have to believe in a God who will send you to Hell if you reject him.
But we're not discussing fundies. We're discussing whether suffering has a logical place in the framework of an omnipotent, benevolent God. I rather doubt that "the fundies" think these things through, which is what we're trying to do in this thread. You've made a jump to "have to believe" or else, which is a different topic (I shan't suggest a new thread right now; I'm confused enough keeping track of this one). I think we can tackle this issue without having to leave "this world."
Diogenes said:
Why can't everyone have all they need ? At least under a system, where an omnipotent God exists.
You forgot "benevolent," and that's the key. Such a God seeks to give humanity the best possible arrangement. Giving them the opportunity to
achieve what they need is better than just giving them the latter ("Teach a man to fish...."). But meaningful achievement requires adversity. It requires risk. Without suffering, there's no such thing as risk. So suffering must exist in such a system.
Diogenes said:
Where does it say it's not possible to have " .. empathy, love, commitment, etc. " without indescriminate suffering ?
Key word: "indiscriminate." I didn't use that word. Do I take it that you agree they can't exist if suffering in general is impossible?
Getting back to "indiscriminate": I can see where you're going. It takes us a bit afield, but I assume this wouldn't seriously derail the thread.
Following the logic of the greatest good being the opportunity to achieve, achievement as such requires not only adversity but free will. We don't consider a rock being pushed up a hill as achieving anything, even though it scaled the thing. Real achievement requires the choice to see the job through, to abstain entirely or to give up in the middle.
Free will can't coexist with the manifest presence of God. Humanity would be automatons at best, conscious rebels at worst, and no good - at least not the greatest good - would come of it. So God "hides." Justice is not swift, nor readily apparent in most cases. Natural disasters strike. Kids die. Good people suffer. Bad people thrive. If it were otherwise we'd have no choice but to follow that God, since such a course of action would be demonstrably the only legitimate one.
This brings us to RandFan's valid points regarding the BTK victim:
RandFan said:
I can't think of any possible way that it could have been good for her. I've given it some serious thought but I just don't see it.
Could you offer some possibilities? How could it have possibly been good for her? You don't have to presuppose that it was good for her but you could tell us how it might have been good for her?
I'll tell you what, I honestly think that to suggest that it could have been good for her in fact demeans her. I think that to suggest that such an act could have some merit, for her, is to take away her humanity. It oppens up the possibility that such actions are justifiable and appropriate.
If I claimed before that her fate was good for her, I recoil from that and retract it. You're right, it's demeaning. I thought I tried specifically to avoid trying to justify her fate. To do so now wouldn't be any less distasteful (hey, while I'm at it I'll say the Katrina victims deservd their fate, yeah, those freeloading ingrates. And something about Dover, PA).
My point was not to say that she, personally, benefited from being tortured and killed. I shudder at the thought. My point was that making it impossible for any of us to suffer that fate would violate the aforementioned package of achievement, adversity and freewill that stems from the OP. It's scary, but it's an indispensible part of human existence. The God of the OP doesn't take half measures. Only the greatest good will suffice, and that brings with it the risk of the greatest suffering. Immunity from
any suffering would stunt human development.