Sanoy
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- Apr 27, 2017
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I trust, which is what faith is, that God has his reasons; the full situation of our lives and the conditions we live in is not fully open to our scrutiny. You do not trust that God has his reasons, but that is an emotional response, not a logical one. No one has made a successful case of the POE because the burden required is far too great. If you think you are different in that, you underestimate the depth of what is required. Mere emotion is not sufficient except in making a speciously provocative case to which nothing needs reconciled against.Thanks for the post. I am having a difficult time figuring out from your post how you reconcile the problem of evil. As I'm interested in learning how Christians reconcile the problem of evil, if you could answer this question, it would help me understand how you reconcile it: what do you suppose is the reason God doesn't prevent rapists from brutally raping children?
Now I ask you, how do you reconcile the fact that you will share the same fate of death, as the rapists and murderers who get away with their crimes? Especially when you feel inside that an invisible force of Justice should be pursuing them? How do you reconcile such notions if no object of that notion exists? But I tell you that an invisible force of Justice does exist, and if good people fail to rise upon this earth to do His will then evil will escape, but they will not flee through death. In death they will reap what they sowed upon this earth.
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