I've asked this before but no one has given me an answer yet, so I'm hoping I can get some sense out of this, if that is possible even. The bible outright says God creates evil, darkness and causes woe to befall people. So why or how do people come off as trying to say that God is "good?"
I am guessing you are referring to Isaiah 45:6-7. I am going to submit that you are using a bad translation. Yes, the KJV does say "evil", but a better translation of the Hebrew to modern English is:
"so all the world from east to west will know there is no other God. I am the LORD, and there is no other. I create the light and make the darkness. I send good times and bad times. I, the LORD, am the one who does these things. "
For the people at the time, "evil" meant "bad times". We still use "evil" that way today, but only as a secondary meaning.
Yes,
for the writers of the OT God did send "bad times" to Israel. I emphasized who the writers were because the concept of God was different then. At the time of the OT, deity was viewed as intimately connected with a particular tribe or nation. If you read Exodus, you see that the Egyptian gods exist, but Yahweh is more powerful. And partisan to the Hebrews.
What this means is that the fortunes of the nation reflect the power and even existence of the deity of that nation. All thru the early history of Israel, the "proof" of the existence of Yahweh is the survival, prosperity, and even expansion of Israel.
Then comes the Babylonian Conquest. Babylon totally defeats and occupies Israel. 10 of the 12 tribes are completely wiped out. Many people are dragged off to Babylon as slaves. This is an
immense crisis of faith. By the rules, the people
shoulddecide that Yahweh doesn't exist. However, one of the triumphs of Judaism is that the Hebrews decide Yahweh
does exist. They make the tremendous intellecual and emotional leap that the existence of God is not tied to the fortunes of Israel. But this change to our modern concept of God goes thru several steps. The Hebrews have to grapple with the question: how can Yahweh have bad things happen to Israel? Isaiah and some of prophets propose
one answer: that God punished Israel for being unrighteous. Another answer is that we have no right to judge God. You can see both of these if you go down to verse 9:
"What sorrow awaits those who argue with their Creator. Does a clay pot argue with its maker? Does the clay dispute with the one who shapes it, saying, 'Stop, you're doing it wrong!' Does the pot exclaim, 'How clumsy can you be?' "
What you
must remember, seekingagnostic32, is that you can't take individual verses out of context. Either their textual context, or their particular historical and sociological contexts. This is against the rules for
any text, including scripture. I'm afraid you did both. Even looking at verse 6, you see that Isaiah is reaffirming the existence of God.
That is the main context for both the chapter and the book.