Hi mle,
You have raised some fairly mammoth questions there! I had hoped to make a quick response and add something later. However, I have found that one thing leads to another and a somewhat more substantial treatise was called for than the two paragraphs I had planned. If you will bear with me, I will try to offer you an answer to your questions, though we will have to start with some basic ideas first.
1. THE FALLACIES OF MONISM AND DUALISM
I believe there are two basic errors which Christians need to aware of and to avoid when formulating theories about evil and the nature and will of God. They are
monism and
dualism.
Dualism essentially implies that there are two gods, one good and one evil. (In Christian manifestations of dualism, it is often Satan who is elevated to the position of the 'bad' god). Needless to say, scripture is totally opposed to this assertion. There is only "one God and Father of all, who is over all and through all and in all" (Eph. 4:6). God does not share His throne with a devil.
On the other hand, monism attempts to reconcile all good and evil in the person of one all-controlling god. (Calvinism, I think, when taken to its logical conclusions, becomes a form of monism). But this is not an option either. The Bible never declares that God is evil, but that He is wholly good (1Chr. 16:34; 2Chr. 7:3; Ps. 25:8; 34:8; 52:9; 86:5; 100:5; 106:1; 118:29; 119:68; 135:3; 136:1; 143:10; Ps. 145:9; Nah. 1:7; Mat. 19:17; Lu. 18:19). "Good and upright is the LORD", declares the Psalmist (Ps. 25:8). "Your name is good" (Ps. 52:9). He is "...the LORD, who exercises kindness, justice and righteousness on earth, for
in these I delight", declares the LORD'" (Jer. 9:24). Apart from being logically impossible for God's character to be wholly good and yet evil at the same time, such a notion is contradicted by His Holiness. "Be holy", God commands, "because I, the LORD your God, am holy" (Lev. 11:44). He is "a faithful God who does no wrong" (Deut. 32:4). His people proclaim, "The LORD is upright; he is my Rock, and there is no wickedness in him". John assures us, "God is light; in him there is no darkness at all" (1Jo. 1:5).
In the light of this vast biblical testimony, we must accept that God is a good God, that He is not even a little bit evil and that everything He does is good. But we must also accept that there isn't another god out there making all the evil things happen too! There is no equal and opposite power that stands before the Almighty or sits on par with the Most High.
Hopefully you can see that there are two ditches on either side which must be avoided here, and let me warn you that although they are conceptually far apart, the road that separates them is severely double-cambred, sloping dramatically on either side. Finding the balance, then, and riding down the middle between the ditches of monism and dualism, isn't easy.
2. THE REALITY OF EVIL
One thing we cannot do, in our attempts to resolve the problem of evil, is to simply deny that evil exists. Paul affirms that our struggle is "against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms" (Eph. 6:12). God is a good God, but evil is still very real and at large in the cosmos.
3. THE REALITY OF GOODNESS
I think it is also necessary to make some comment on the nature of divine goodness. Granted that there is one God, that He is good, and that what men call 'evil' is not illusory but does indeed exist, some may yet attempt to incorporate evil within God's goodness. The Calvinistic doctrine of 'total depravity' affords some grounds for the claim that man is so incapable of judging what is good that what he calls 'black' may, in fact, be God's 'white', and vice versa. 'God's thoughts are higher than ours', so perhaps He does do evil.
I think this is a dangerous line of reasoning which could turn Christianity into a form of demon worship. Moreover, I find no convincing biblical basis for it. "O
taste and
see that the LORD is good", the Psalmist exhorts us (Ps. 34:8). "How great is your goodness, which you have stored up for those who fear you, which you bestow in the
sight of men" (Ps. 31:19). God's goodness may be higher and better than ours, but only insofar as a perfect geometric circle is better than a child's attempt to draw a wheel. When God's goodness is manifested, reasonable men generally recognise and laud it.
Man, originally created in the image of God, has not become so totally depraved (ie. totally lost the image of God) that God's goodness has become opaque to his reason. He is still considered to be in God's image, as demonstrated in Gen. 9:6 and James 3:9.
4. UNDERSTANDING EVIL
But how to put all this together and make sense of it? I have already written for much longer than I intended! I shall try to be brief.
First, we need to distinguish between several kinds of 'evil'. (This is almost certainly the key to interpreting certain difficult texts which we will come to in a moment). 'Moral evil' (sin) is lawlessness committed by creatures with free will. 'Natural evil' is the disorder and decay of the universe. 'Metaphysical evil' is unintentional evil committed by creatures as a result of their finitude and clearly does not apply to an infinite God.
With regards to the first category, we are completely assured of God's moral perfection in scripture. God hates evil (Ps. 7:11; Rom. 1:18) and will not tempt anyone into doing it (Jam. 1:13). Some objections might be raised, however. If God hardens people's hearts - apparently causing them to become sinful - then He does in fact create moral evil. In reply, we must observe that God only hardens those who have already committed themselves to evil, accelerating their 'self-confirmed sinfulness' for His purposes. Pharoah hardened his own heart before God acted (Ex. 7:13-14). People have already refused to accept the truth before God sends them powerful delusions (2Th. 2:11-12). Therefore God can still hold the sinner responsible and not be accused of being unjust (Rom. 1:20). If the clay will not submit to the Potter's hand, it will be made into an ignoble vessel. God's purposes may still be accomplished despite sin or even through it.
'Natural evil', on the other hand, is connected with the Fall and God's curse (Gen. 3:17-18). God does indeed send disasters in response to sin (eg. the flood in Gen 6-8) and the Bible does not view this as in any way contrary to God's goodness (cf. Rev. 16:5-7). We can understand scriptures like Isaiah 45:7 according to this second category. In the King James text, it reads:
"I form the light, and create darkness: I make peace, and create evil: I the LORD do all these things." (Is. 45:7 KJV)
This is not the most helpful of translations. The Hebrew word
ra, translated evil, may also be understood in a nonmoral sense (as in Gen. 47:9 or Is. 47:11). The NASB (probably the best literal modern translation) and the NIV (probably the best idiomatic modern translation) render the verse like this:
7 The One forming light and creating darkness, Causing well-being and creating calamity; I am the LORD who does all these.
Isaiah 45:7 (NASB)
7 I form the light and create darkness, I bring prosperity and create disaster; I, the LORD, do all these things.
Isaiah 45:7 (NIV)
We have already seen that God does bring evil - that is, calamity and adversity - upon people, and that this does not contradict God's goodness or His holiness. God remains a good God and retains His moral perfection. This interpretation of Isaiah 45:7 makes good sense.
What remains to be resolved is how moral evil exists in God's universe, when He did not create it.
5. THE EXISTENCE OF EVIL
We have already seen that God did not (and does not) create evil. However, we all believe that God created everything that exists. Evil cannot have a unique existence if God made everything, but neither can God have made evil if in fact God does not create evil!
The solution to this problem lies firstly in recognising that the present state of God's creation is not the same as its original condition, and secondly in understanding that evil is actually the absence or disorder of the good. Bruce R. Marino illustrates this reality by pointing to the chemical composition of common table salt, a compound of sodium chloride. Salt is good for many purposes, but when its elements are not bound together they are both lethal! 'Like disordered salt, God's perfect creation is deadly when thrown out of balance by sin'. It is through first Satan's and then Adam's fall, both acts of free will, that all evil, including natural evil, ultimately arises.
I shall leave the reasons why God allowed this to happen for a future post. This one is long enough already!
God bless.
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