Mr. Spock you pose some good questions with a kind of intellectual voracity that I respect. These issues that you have brought up have indeed been muddied up by many confused in recent history by Catholics and non-Catholics alike. I too wondered the exact same things you wondered, and it took quite a while to sort out through all the claims that Catholics made on these issues. I hope I can beam some shaft of light on this issue.
First of all…
If you genuinely believe that a loving God exists, then the problem of evil is not much of a problem. At most, it’s an “I don’t completely understand but have faith that God has his reasons” issue.
While what you say is true, this can be easily misunderstood into the Protestant notion of “Reason and faith contradict each other.”
There is a big difference between a supposed truth of faith contradicting reason than a truth of faith not being understood by reason. If something contradicts reason, then it automatically is false. This applies also to religion, I would say (as well as Aquinas and those rest) … if some religious doctrine contradicts the truth as it can be known by human reason, then that religious doctrine is false.
Now, a lot of times, people claim that a particular rational idea contradicts a particular religious idea, when in fact, there is either no actual contradiction or, if there is, the “rational idea” is not something rational at all but false (or, yes, the religious idea could be false … or both).
Now, there is also a case where a truth of faith is not understood by reason and yet does not contradict it either. An example here is the Incarnation, where Christ simultaneously had two natures (human and divine). Reason can’t sort out how that’s possible but it can’t see how it could technically be impossible either.
I assert, though, that this issue (that this thread poses) can actually be much more understood by human reason than most religious and non-religious people claim.
Then, also unanimously you condemn the sexual expression of love between two consenting adults as evil and sinful, if those two people happen to belong to the same gender. Even if they are legitimally married heterosexuals, but their act is not aimed at procreation (rather simple pleasure seeking) you say that their act of love is evil. Next, you try to find “excuses” for the acts of supreme “non-love”, for example rape, torture, murder - by saying that we “cannot know” if these acts are truly evil.
Okay, here, I think it is wise to define what is meant by “love.” What is the definition of love? Does anyone think this is important? Also, what is meant by “good?” And “evil” for that matter.
I would, with respect, ask you, Spock, to explain what these mean. I’ll explain what I (and the Church, I think) means by these terms on my next post, though I have already partly done so with some thoroughness (at least with “good”) in this previous post(s):
forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=5386262&postcount=61
and continued here …
forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=5386263&postcount=62
(but you don’t have to read it … do what you feel like)
Nonsense. Giving **and **accepting pleasure is an expression of love. I would accept your reasoning if the act would be unilateral. If the aim would only be “accepting” pleasure, it would be selfish. But giving **and **accepting pleasure is mutual. Where is the evil in that? Also the giving and receiving pleasure does not have to be simultaneous. One can give and not receive at a certain time, while one can receive and not give at another time - all these by mutual consensus of the partners involved.
Do you perhaps accept the possibility that two people can consent to do something that isn’t good for them (even if it gives them some kind of pleasure)? Are there at least exceptions to this?
A good work to read that convinced me that pleasure and goodness are different was Plato’s
Gorgias. It completely changed my life.
But once again, Spock, what do
you mean by love, goodness, and evil?