UndercoverElephant
Pachyderm of a Thousand Faces
- Joined
- Jan 17, 2002
- Messages
- 9,058
I have noticed there are lot of threads around here which share a general theme of "How could God exist and let this happen?" This, I think, is the most powerful reason why people find it impossible to believe in the mainstream Christian conception of God. Put simply, the state of the world is so appalling, the amount of suffering so great, that there could not possibly be an omnipotent being in charge of the debacle.
What I am not going to do is defend the mainstream Christian conception of God. If you think God is all powerful, all knowing and 100% "good" (whatever that means), then it seems inevitable that such arguments should kill off any chance that such a God exists. With this much I am total agreement. However, Christian Theology (such as that of Tillich) does have a response to this - not that it is known about or properly understood by the majority of Christians. The real problem, IMO, is the naive conception of an anthropomorphised God who makes decisions in the same sort of ways that human beings do. Only if you have an anthropomorphised conception of God does one envisage a God who "thinks" like humans do. This would surely have to involve God having a brain, which is of course utterly ridiculous. The more intellectual sort of theist would give a two-fold answer.
1) God must stand outside the human decision-making process.
Human beings have both free will and brains. We create our own conceptions of good and evil and then (hopefully) try to live up to them. Sometimes we get it wrong. Sometimes some people get it very badly wrong. The result is the vast amounts of human-induced suffering. I do not believe it is valid to blame God for this suffering. This is the responsibility of humans. The alternative would be for God to arrange a sort of "Stepford Wives" reality where everything runs like clockwork and nobody misbehaves. Personally, I believe such a reality wouldn't be worth living in. It wouldn't be life as we know it. Even though allowing humans free will results in infinite amounts of terrible suffering, this is still better than continual intervention by God to prevent human-induced evil.
2) God is unable to accurately predict the future.
This actually follows from (1). If humans have free will, then it is impossible for God to know in advance what those humans are going to do. But if God cannot know the future perfectly then He also cannot know exactly when the next earthquake is going to hit Istanbul. He therefore cannot take any action to prevent natural suffering either.
So there is your answer. These things are not a falsification of the existence of God per se. They are a falsification of the existence of the God of naive anthropomorphised Christianity. It also follows from my argument that the naive conceptions of "all-knowing" and "all good" are wrong. God can only know what is currently known by humans in the present, since it is still possible that God can know the contents of all human minds. But God cannot perfectly know the future, because the future is not 100% predetermined. He cannot be "all good" because "good" is a human-relative term. Whose side does He take when two humans have a dispute because they genuinely disagree on what is "good" and what is "bad"? He cannot. To do this, He would need a brain of his own so He could independently figure out what "absolute good" was.
These are just some thoughts - they are offered for wider discussion. My conclusion is that these arguments-from-evil are less powerful than they may seem at first. What they do is narrow down what sort of God could possibly exist. What they do not do is conclusively prove that no sort of God exists.
I was an atheist for many, many years. The current appalling state of play on Planet Earth was my primary reason for being 100% confident I was correct. How could an all-powerful Being be presiding over this disaster? The answer is that even God is confined to work within the laws of logic and to a large extent within the laws nature, that human beings have been granted the right to free will, and that even God cannot have perfect knowledge of the future because determinism isn't true.
None of the above is offered as a proof of the existence of God, rather obviously. It merely attempts to explain how it is possible for God to exist even though "the plan for planet Earth", if there ever was one, has gone very horribly wrong. Think of it like this: If God did exist (*the sort of God I have described, not the naive Christian omni-everything God), what could He actually do to fix the situation on Earth? What could He do that would not risk making the situation even worse? It is not clear to me that He could do anything at all. Human Beings are responsible for what goes on down here, and it is US that are making a mess of it, not God. One might even go further and claim that God has already tried to do something to make it better, and that these attempts have resulted in organised religion - which turned out to cause more problems than it solves. This would rule out further supernatural intervention on the grounds that more religions are not likely to improve an already messy situation. Better to stand back and let the stupid humans try to figure their own way to clear up the mess that they have made.
Geoff
What I am not going to do is defend the mainstream Christian conception of God. If you think God is all powerful, all knowing and 100% "good" (whatever that means), then it seems inevitable that such arguments should kill off any chance that such a God exists. With this much I am total agreement. However, Christian Theology (such as that of Tillich) does have a response to this - not that it is known about or properly understood by the majority of Christians. The real problem, IMO, is the naive conception of an anthropomorphised God who makes decisions in the same sort of ways that human beings do. Only if you have an anthropomorphised conception of God does one envisage a God who "thinks" like humans do. This would surely have to involve God having a brain, which is of course utterly ridiculous. The more intellectual sort of theist would give a two-fold answer.
1) God must stand outside the human decision-making process.
Human beings have both free will and brains. We create our own conceptions of good and evil and then (hopefully) try to live up to them. Sometimes we get it wrong. Sometimes some people get it very badly wrong. The result is the vast amounts of human-induced suffering. I do not believe it is valid to blame God for this suffering. This is the responsibility of humans. The alternative would be for God to arrange a sort of "Stepford Wives" reality where everything runs like clockwork and nobody misbehaves. Personally, I believe such a reality wouldn't be worth living in. It wouldn't be life as we know it. Even though allowing humans free will results in infinite amounts of terrible suffering, this is still better than continual intervention by God to prevent human-induced evil.
2) God is unable to accurately predict the future.
This actually follows from (1). If humans have free will, then it is impossible for God to know in advance what those humans are going to do. But if God cannot know the future perfectly then He also cannot know exactly when the next earthquake is going to hit Istanbul. He therefore cannot take any action to prevent natural suffering either.
So there is your answer. These things are not a falsification of the existence of God per se. They are a falsification of the existence of the God of naive anthropomorphised Christianity. It also follows from my argument that the naive conceptions of "all-knowing" and "all good" are wrong. God can only know what is currently known by humans in the present, since it is still possible that God can know the contents of all human minds. But God cannot perfectly know the future, because the future is not 100% predetermined. He cannot be "all good" because "good" is a human-relative term. Whose side does He take when two humans have a dispute because they genuinely disagree on what is "good" and what is "bad"? He cannot. To do this, He would need a brain of his own so He could independently figure out what "absolute good" was.
These are just some thoughts - they are offered for wider discussion. My conclusion is that these arguments-from-evil are less powerful than they may seem at first. What they do is narrow down what sort of God could possibly exist. What they do not do is conclusively prove that no sort of God exists.
I was an atheist for many, many years. The current appalling state of play on Planet Earth was my primary reason for being 100% confident I was correct. How could an all-powerful Being be presiding over this disaster? The answer is that even God is confined to work within the laws of logic and to a large extent within the laws nature, that human beings have been granted the right to free will, and that even God cannot have perfect knowledge of the future because determinism isn't true.
None of the above is offered as a proof of the existence of God, rather obviously. It merely attempts to explain how it is possible for God to exist even though "the plan for planet Earth", if there ever was one, has gone very horribly wrong. Think of it like this: If God did exist (*the sort of God I have described, not the naive Christian omni-everything God), what could He actually do to fix the situation on Earth? What could He do that would not risk making the situation even worse? It is not clear to me that He could do anything at all. Human Beings are responsible for what goes on down here, and it is US that are making a mess of it, not God. One might even go further and claim that God has already tried to do something to make it better, and that these attempts have resulted in organised religion - which turned out to cause more problems than it solves. This would rule out further supernatural intervention on the grounds that more religions are not likely to improve an already messy situation. Better to stand back and let the stupid humans try to figure their own way to clear up the mess that they have made.
Geoff
Last edited:
