S
SamCA
Guest
Yeah, I have to agree. A limitation on free will would be bad, but allowing people to be free and then tormenting them for eternity when they actually exercise that freedom is probably worse.I don’t know, if it’s between not having free will when it comes to choosing sins and BEING TORTURED FOREVER IN THE FIRES OF HELL, I would rather God just took away my free will whenever I was tempted to sin.
Well, leaving aside for a second the question of Hell, I can actually see a pretty valid defense of Christianity here. Let’s be honest – everything you described above is something that some human being out there chose to do. It wasn’t God who gassed those North Korean families, it was the people who make up the North Korean government. We can wonder why God doesn’t intervene and save them, but hey, let’s give God the benefit of the doubt and assume that he has some very good reason for his largely non-interventionist policy as regards the actions of his free willed people on Earth. A lot of very intelligent Christian apologists have made some very good arguments in favor of this view – check out some of Plantinga’s writing, sometime.As for the suffering of others, sometimes this argument makes sense to me. But it’s VERY hard to come to terms with when I read stories of suffering. I was reading many stories of terrible suffering that Muslim women experience throughout their lives. I saw a documentary that had former political prisoners of North Korea recount the horrors they witnessed and the tortures they were subjected to. I read things about famines and human rights abuses in the former Soviet Union, I read things about forced prostitution of women and children, and many other horrors that human beings perpetrate against one another.
This is so horrible and so pointless. What’s the use in the suffering of a 10 year old child as he and his parents are put into a glass chamber and subjected to chemical weapons tests? (This is done in North Korea.) What’s the use in the suffering of a young woman who is hanged upside down while her husband beats her, pokes out her eyes, cuts off her ears etc. because he suspects her of having committed adultery (an actual story I read about a crime in Pakistan)?
What I have a harder time with, as regards the Problem of Evil, is the natural variety. People didn’t create sudden infant death syndrome. Cancer is hard-wired into the human genome, which implies that if we were designed, cancer was created intentionally. Viruses and bacteria are part of God’s Creation, if we are to believe the tenets of Christianity.
Why would a loving parent create things like that? It’d be like buying a rabid dog and locking it in a room with your children.
Let us suppose, for a moment, that there is a compelling reason for allowing human will to be truly free. That God would truly love to jump in and save everyone in the nick of time like a divine superhero, but that for the greater good of all, he must restrain himself from doing so. I’m not convinced I buy it, but it seems at least possible.God can, why doesn’t He? This is really troubling to me.
What that still leaves me unable to explain is Hell. Let’s say that the people here arguing that people choose to separate themselves from God are totally right – are we to believe than an omnipotent, omnibenevolent being couldn’t figure out a better place to put all those who reject him than an eternal pit of torment?
If I love my kids, but they decide they hate me, I’ll probably be heartbroken. But I also probably won’t chain them up in the basement and hire a guy to torture them.