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Iron_Donkey
Guest
Actually, there are several. The entire story of salvation history, for one: the sin of Adam, the betrayal by Judas, the Crucifixion of God Himself are all undeniably bad. The result? The salvation of the human race, but not just a returning to where we were before. God has become Man that man might become sons of God (CCC 460), a far greater state than the garden state destroyed by Adam and Eve.Interesting point…not one of these saints(obviously excluding Socrates) cites a specific situation where allowing evil to win the day leads to a greater good. Why do you think that is?Can you tell me, or anyone else, why they cite no specifics?
Much good has been brought out of much evil. This of course doesn’t make the evil less evil. But that’s the whole free will thing for you (more on which in a bit).
Job asked more or less the same thing. The answer? More or less that we can’t always find an obvious answer but that, as I am sure you are aware, the inability to find an obvious answer does not mean that there isn’t one.Can anyone offer a greater good to allowing a seven-year-old girl to be consumed by leukemia?
I’m sure you’ve heard the phrase that a butterfly may flap it’s wings in Africa and cause a tornado in Texas. That may be exaggeration, but such complicated systems (technical name - chaotic) do exist, and if we can’t even follow the effects of small actions across the space of a day or two for the much simpler physical systems that are governed by rules that we more or less understand, why should we expect to be able to follow all the effects of every good or bad thing that is allowed to happen back and forth across the entire span of creation?
This is all well and good to say, but you are not capable of seeing what would happen should any of these ways you think you found actually be tried. Further, if by “God wishes to be loved” you mean “God wishes people to have warm and fuzzy feelings about and generally feel well disposed towards Himself” this is such a tiny slice of what’s going on as to be hard to respond to without a thousand qualifiers. I mean, yes, it appears that God wants us to be happy, and to be happy about Him, but He also wants us to be good, and to be so by our own volition. If that happens fully, then we’ll generally like God. But God’s not just trying to win a popularity contest here.If this version of God wishes to be loved, then there are other ways that I can think of with my puny human mind.
So yeah, God has the power to snap His fingers and put everyone in a happy place. But instead He wishes to treat us like actual people, to allow us to make real choices without simply overriding the bad consequences. He’ll work with the results of the evil we bring about, of course, but to simply make it go away is to treat us less like the sons He wishes us to be, and more like the pet dog whose mess you occasionally clean up. (And this is the free will thing. God makes us co-creators in fact (CCC 307ish), which is a great honor and a responsibility and allows the ability to make things go horribly wrong if we so choose. But we’re real people, and what we do is done.)
And yes, that means that some pretty horrible things happen - the death of the seven year old girl with leukemia, as a result of Adam’s sin - but we have to remember that death, as hard and bad as it is, is not the end, so it is not as though the girl is simply irrevocably lost because God doesn’t care. And we also have to remember that God does bring good out of evil, even while He wishes we wouldn’t bring the evil about. In such a case, we may not understand what it is, but then again some people do begin to see it, even in such hard cases. But again, that God does so is a result of reason, not always (though not never either) of observation - we don’t have to see and completely understand God’s plan to know that it exists.