A logical contradiction follows from this, though.
You want to avoid having God create suffering, since it would be hard to explain why some suffer and others do not.
To solve that, you find it easier to say that God just created the natural laws. His creation “unfolds” based on those laws.
So, the solution to the problem of suffering is that the laws causes the suffering – not God.
Why did the laws cause suffering?
Because God created the laws that way – it’s part of his creation.
There’s the problem – God created the laws, which cause suffering, destruction, and whatever else we’re trying not to blame on God.
It’s even worse – apparently, He can’t even intervene to lessen the suffering caused by His own laws and creation.
So, he has laws and creation which are out of control, causing entropy, decay, death and suffering – for no other reason than after He created these things He can’t do anything to stop them or lessen their impact.
Fr. Coyne’s answer is much better and easier to understand, actually (as wrong as it is) … and that is (to paraphrase him – you saw the quotes I posted), “God created laws, but didn’t know what would happen after that.”
The Darwinian-apologist, Catholic Ken Miller says exactly the same thing. God was basically surprised by what resulted from evolution. Human beings were not planned, not directly created – they were an accidental result.
God created some evolutionary processes, but supposedly, God didn’t know what would result from them. That’s exactly what Coyne, Miller and other Catholics claim.
Personally – and I’m sorry to sound judgmental, (I guess that’s the way evolution created me

) – I have to say that the idea is blasphemous and incredibly false regarding the nature of God.
But that’s really what it is – an ignorant god. That’s what Darwinian theory gives us – at the very best, if you want to hold on to the concept of a god at all.