Nature is not evil because it is unaware of what occurs. Blind processes are not morally responsible for misfortunes and tragedies.
I would tend to agree. I don’t know that I believe that things will continue this way throughout eternity, but I believe that this way of things has been prevalent so far since the earliest Creation.
Being a zookeeper by occupation has given me some perspectives on this that many don’t get, I think.
At the establishment where I work, we have emus—the big flightless birds that originated in Australia (2nd only to the ostrich in size), and which have proven popular as a livestock animal in North America.
We had one weak male get killed by the most dominant male once. This dominant male, paradoxically enough, was one of only two individuals (out of a total population of seven) that would willingly let humans pet and groom him; indeed, he was amenable to human direction and non-aggressive toward humans even in the moments after he had slain the weak one, allowing himself to be led back to his own pen from which he had just escaped.
A couple of points here. One, I think this highlights the fact that animals aren’t being evil even when they kill. They’re just doing what nature/biology/instinct have programmed them to do.
Two, not trying to toot my own horn here, but obviously a human can understand this and not give way to visceral emotional reactions to such a situation that might otherwise have us feel anger or hatred toward an animal that’s just doing what nature programmed it to do. This highlights the fact that humans, when they rise to their full moral height, can rise above instinct and be the stewards of God’s creation in a moral and compassionate way. More is given to humans—a human soul and human understanding—and from humans God expects more.