L
Luke_K
Guest
First of all, pain and suffering are not the same as evil.We have the possibility to be more joyful because evil exists than if it did not exist.
The possiblity of heroism, for example, can only come about because there is an evil to overcome.
The possiblity of sacrifice can only happen if there is suffering to endure.
There is the possibility of greater love because there is the chance to offer sacrifice. Those who freely choose to love God, in the face of pain and sacrifice, offer a higher degree of love than would be possible if there was no evil.
A simplistic analogy:
A student who is given all the answers of the test while taking it, can achieve a 100% score.
But only when the risk of failure (and the pain and suffering that can cause) can the test show a much higher achievement of getting all the right answers without them being given.
So, the risk of evil provides a greater good.
God could have forced all creatures to do whatever He wanted. But there would be less interest for Him to create a world like that, rather than where creatures could freely choose for or against Him, and thus truly have merit for their actions.
Second, if your argument is correct, then that means God is dependent on evil to bring about the best good possible. Therefore God would not be all-powerful. It would mean he needs evil, which is a horrifying prospect.