Since there are many Christian users on Smogon, I am curious as to how you explain the existence of evil. I recently read another thread on a similar area, and thought that this would be a good discussion point. This is a well known and frequently discussed issue. However, I have yet to be confronted with an explanation than cannot be refuted within a couple of lines. For those of you who are not aware, here is the problem:
According to many Christians, God is:
- All Powerful (omnipotent)
- All Knowing (omniscient – arguably a subset of omnipotence)
- All loving (omnibenevolent)
The issue here is that if god loves us, knows about suffering and is able to stop it, why do evil and suffering continue to exist?
A few common counter arguments:
Free Will – God gave us free will so we choose to commit sins.
Never did understand why on earth he would give us free will in the first place. Given that he is all-powerful, he is able to enrich us (and himself) fully without doing so. It would be far more effective to merely allow us to believe we had free will, for example. This also goes no way to explaining so-called “natural evil.”
The Devil – quite possibly the worst argument in history – need I explain? God can destroy the devil, so why not?
Suffering is necessary for Good? – nobody ever seems to understand the meaning of all-powerful. If you are all powerful, you are capable of providing good to everyone without evil. Also sometimes along the lines of "if we don't understand suffering, we cannot understand pleasure/good." The same applies in this case, god is capable of allowing us to feel and understand pleasure without pain, as he is omnipotent. This also goes no way to explaining why some suffer more pain than others.
It is a Test? - since God knows the results, this would be unnecessary
I’m afraid that the only conclusion I can come to is that Christianity is (very slightly) wrong. It seems clear to me that god is not all powerful. You may now be asking: why not “all-powerful but not all-loving”? A Christian may believe this due to the (arguably vain) assertion that we are the most important things and must be loved by God. Nonetheless, in fact, Omnipotence is in itself slightly inconsistent with Omniscience (which, arguably, you must be if you are omnipotent as you have the power to know everything. Subtle difference actually, as the omnipotent but not omniscient one can chose not to know.)
Consider: you know everything; therefore you know (and are forced to know) exactly what you will do in the future. You then therefore lack the ability to do something different. Therefore, by contradiction, you cannot be omnipotent.
Please explain to me why I’m wrong, and hence how one can believe a Christian God exists, particularly when there is no supporting evidence for his existence as far as I'm aware (if there is feel free to tell me what it is.)
I just wanted to add something. If God is not quite omnipotent, this would not make him unworthy of worship, or give any additional reason to sin. It is, in reality, a technicality, so the question arises as to why some Christians are so unflinching in their beliefs.
According to many Christians, God is:
- All Powerful (omnipotent)
- All Knowing (omniscient – arguably a subset of omnipotence)
- All loving (omnibenevolent)
The issue here is that if god loves us, knows about suffering and is able to stop it, why do evil and suffering continue to exist?
A few common counter arguments:
Free Will – God gave us free will so we choose to commit sins.
Never did understand why on earth he would give us free will in the first place. Given that he is all-powerful, he is able to enrich us (and himself) fully without doing so. It would be far more effective to merely allow us to believe we had free will, for example. This also goes no way to explaining so-called “natural evil.”
The Devil – quite possibly the worst argument in history – need I explain? God can destroy the devil, so why not?
Suffering is necessary for Good? – nobody ever seems to understand the meaning of all-powerful. If you are all powerful, you are capable of providing good to everyone without evil. Also sometimes along the lines of "if we don't understand suffering, we cannot understand pleasure/good." The same applies in this case, god is capable of allowing us to feel and understand pleasure without pain, as he is omnipotent. This also goes no way to explaining why some suffer more pain than others.
It is a Test? - since God knows the results, this would be unnecessary
I’m afraid that the only conclusion I can come to is that Christianity is (very slightly) wrong. It seems clear to me that god is not all powerful. You may now be asking: why not “all-powerful but not all-loving”? A Christian may believe this due to the (arguably vain) assertion that we are the most important things and must be loved by God. Nonetheless, in fact, Omnipotence is in itself slightly inconsistent with Omniscience (which, arguably, you must be if you are omnipotent as you have the power to know everything. Subtle difference actually, as the omnipotent but not omniscient one can chose not to know.)
Consider: you know everything; therefore you know (and are forced to know) exactly what you will do in the future. You then therefore lack the ability to do something different. Therefore, by contradiction, you cannot be omnipotent.
Please explain to me why I’m wrong, and hence how one can believe a Christian God exists, particularly when there is no supporting evidence for his existence as far as I'm aware (if there is feel free to tell me what it is.)
I just wanted to add something. If God is not quite omnipotent, this would not make him unworthy of worship, or give any additional reason to sin. It is, in reality, a technicality, so the question arises as to why some Christians are so unflinching in their beliefs.