Know the arguments. Don't buy them. Do you think they adequately address the problem of natural evil?
I don't know. Depends what you consider "adequately." I think that it is possible that one or more is true, just as it's possible that God exists. That said, there is little evidence that God exists.
It seems to me that the most popular approach lately is to invoke the "greater good" argument. I have two problems with it. One is this: God is a utilitarian? If God were going to have a moral structure don't you think deontology would be more "perfect"? I really have a hard time believing that God, if he exists, would be a consequentialist.
You're using several terms with which I am unfamiliar. Care to "dumb it down" a little bit for me?
The second issue is this: the whole line of argument seems to remove evidence from the equation. Absolutely anything could occur and we would have to argue, "Well, God must have a reason because he is all-good; we just can see all the details." The argument is not logically necessary, but it is unfalsifiable. I don't see any particular reason why anyone should ever accept it.
Well, here I tend to disagree. True, there is little evidence that God exists, but if God exists I don't find it that unlikely that evil would exist also, assuming that there are greater goods. For example, if it is a greater good for us to have the free will to choose good over evil, then it makes logical sense that evil must exist in order for the greater good to exist.
That still runs into the problem of "the ends justifying the means".
The idea that god causing unconcievable death and suffering for some larger plan that we cannot fathom that ends with a "greater good" result does not sit right with me.
We hold to ourselves that the committing bad and immoral acts are not justified even if the result is something good. How "good" can that good be if horrible things were performed to achieve that good?
It's true that if we cannot fathom the ends (as is usually the case since we aren't all-knowing) then the ends cannot justify the means. God, on the other hand, knows exactly what the ends will be, and therefore the same cannot necessarily be said for him.
That said, we do things all the time that would be considered evil if in another context, but we allow them when we feel that they are for the greater good. For example, governments often take over land that is owned by an individual if it is for the greater good. Another example is the death penalty.
In God's case, one argument is that our having free will is a greater good than a world without evil.
If the morals that god hands down to us are absolute and immutable then under no condition or context do those immoral acts become moral acts later on.
Few acts are immutably immoral under all conditions and contexts.
If god says murder is immoral under what conditions does it become moral?
You're using the loaded term "murder" instead of "killing" here. Since "murder" is defined as unjustified (immoral) killing, then under no circumstance is murder moral. However, there are many circumstances where killing is not considered murder, and is justified.
When god does it for the greater good? Does the greater good justify the immoral act of murder?
Yes, it would. Self defense, punishment, and war are all justified reasons for killing, and are considered moral if they serve the greater good.
-Bri