F
fhansen
Guest
To this question, sometimes posed by atheists and theists alike, I believe Aquinas would answer that this world could be better, because an infinitely powerful God could always make something better. But by the same logic, it seems that if God could always make something better, then He could still never make anything perfect-which is the equivalent of saying that evil will always be present in creation to some degree by virtue of the fact that creation, itself, is not God, or, perhaps to put it another way: even God can’t create another God.
But this unavoidable “flaw” becomes an even greater dilemma if God deems it wise to grant freewill to creation-in, say, the form of man or angels. Because then this imperfect creation can conceivably express its imperfection, by an act of its imperfect will, with moral evil or sin a possible result. If all this is so, then the only way a created being with freewill could consistently act perfectly would be if He was somehow led by Gods’ perfect will instead of his own.
And if this is so, then perhaps it would make sense that the only way for these beings, this creation-with-freewill, to always behave perfectly would be for them to choose, not to act perfectly, which they could not consistently do, but, if possible, to always be directly united with God, who is perfection itself, and as such the only Being who always wills rightly. And I believe this is consistent in a general way with Catholic thought and teachings on the New Law/Covenant, except maybe for my first paragraph. Any thoughts of your own on this?
But this unavoidable “flaw” becomes an even greater dilemma if God deems it wise to grant freewill to creation-in, say, the form of man or angels. Because then this imperfect creation can conceivably express its imperfection, by an act of its imperfect will, with moral evil or sin a possible result. If all this is so, then the only way a created being with freewill could consistently act perfectly would be if He was somehow led by Gods’ perfect will instead of his own.
And if this is so, then perhaps it would make sense that the only way for these beings, this creation-with-freewill, to always behave perfectly would be for them to choose, not to act perfectly, which they could not consistently do, but, if possible, to always be directly united with God, who is perfection itself, and as such the only Being who always wills rightly. And I believe this is consistent in a general way with Catholic thought and teachings on the New Law/Covenant, except maybe for my first paragraph. Any thoughts of your own on this?