I just came on site. I am a theologian, that is to say, I have an earned doctorate in theology, plus publications, teaching experience, etc. I am more than happy to discuss and debate here. I am very familiar with the traditional proofs for the existence of God, the counterarguments, and major modern reformulations on both sides. I had time only to skim through the posting here. I thought I would respond as best as I can to some of the major themes I see here. A large amount of skepticism hangs on the problem of evil. Why would a good God allow all the suffering in the world? If you want to shipwreck someone's theology, this is the place to start, believe me. Historically, it was argued that either evil and suffering were a righteous punishment or sin, or evil is in mere appearance only. If we only could see the whole rational scheme of things, we would see how all these apparent evils are all for the better. White there is some degree of merit here, most of these arguments leave modern folks cold. The way I approach matter here is to fist of all note that there is not just one model of God in Christianity, there are at present at least two. The classical model of God saw God as omnipotent, predestining everything, ruling as a Ruthless Moralist, or Ruling Caesar or Unmoved Mover. However, there is also neo-classical theism, which takes a much different approach. Here it is argued that ruling over a democracy of free beings takes far more skill than being a cosmic dictator. We all have a genuine free will and therefore God cannot decide for us. God provides initial aims, creative possibilities, for us to actualize to create a more beautiful world. But, in the end, its our decision how we actualize these. Sometimes wee make dumb choices and fall into suffering, etc. Well, why then does God give us a free will? If it is free will that gets us into trouble, why didn't God just program us to be perfect robots? My answer is that would be impossible for God to do. God's aim is to create beauty, and beauty demands complexity, and complexity means freedom that things can be some other way, that possibilities for evil overlap with possibilities for good. For example, piano wire was created to create beautiful notes. However, the way it has to be made to do that leaves open the possibility you could also use it for evil and tear off someone's head with it, which has been done in times of war, by the way. So yes, God could have created a world with little or no suffering and evil, but it would have had to be very simple and downright boring. Now, I am not arguing that God just sits on the sidelines, not dong all that he can do. God is in fact doing all that he can do. God rules persuasively, not coercively. Of course, some tradition=bound theists may find this concept of God too small. However, my response, then, is that their God is just too big. Omnipotence is a nonsensical theological notion, to start with. In the past, theologians would claim God is omnipotent and then kill it was a million qualifies. Aquinas, for example, argued God is omnipotent, but then went on with a can't-do list for God. God cannot change, suffer, experience negative emotion, violate any of the laws of geometry, etc. Furthermore, if God does predestine it all, then we have absolutely no freedom and are but puppets. In addition, this whole classical model of God as void of body, parts, passion, compassion, wholly immutable, wholly unaffected by the world, all-determining, etc., largely comes from certain schools of Hellenic philosophy incorporated in the early church, and definitely not the Bible. So, bottom line: In addressing the problem of evil, we also have to reconsider and possibly redefine what God is like in his or her own nature and we have definite choices here.