How can you even define "evil" without a religion, or at least a universal philosophy, to draw the line?
The human experience and the Golden Rule, an idea that came about long before Christ.
More and more it is obvious that "evil" is not universal, but relative. It is a convenient categorization, a circular file to place unwanted people and events. Usually it is defined as "things we don't like", or, at best, "things that are bad for us."
Evil certainly is relative (to us), and the golden rule is the best shot we have at generally moving towards a more loving human race.
So this talk of "God could have made the world without evil" is like saying "God could have made the world without ugliness" or intelligence, or skill, or any other relative word. It's a non-starter.
The desire to kill somebody results from some chemical imbalance in the brain. Something sets a person off and gives them the belief that they must kill someone else. God has complete control over that "something", and evil is not relative to God (as he created the term in the first place).
Upvote
0