G
Gorgias
Guest
OK… so what you mean isn’t suffering without cause, but rather, suffering that a person doesn’t directly bring upon himself. There’s a cause, after all, to all of your examples. So, then, how do we understand injustice, which is what you’re really getting at, isn’t it? I think I would respond that the answer has to do with man’s fallen nature, through which we lost the ‘garden’ and gained the ‘thistles’. Is it fair, then, that there is suffering in the world? It depends on how wide is the scope under consideration. Ultimately, if we have infinite scope, we see that suffering on earth pales in comparison to the beatitude of heaven, so there’s no real notion of ‘injustice’, since the scale upon which ‘suffering’ is experienced is so much smaller than the scale upon which ‘heaven’ is experienced.One, this doesn’t explain gratuitous suffering or suffering without cause.
For example some babies are born with cancer or other serious diseases through absolutely no fault of their own or anyone else’s.
You’ll need to define what you mean by ‘free will’ to be able to make a statement like that. Be forewarned, though: that definition isn’t as easy to agree upon as it might seem at first blush…Two, free will is overrated
I would answer that what is being violated isn’t the woman’s free will. I would define free will as the ability to choose for one’s self a course of action. Whether one is able to embark on that course of action is another consideration entirely, and is not a question of ‘will’ but of ‘act’.Let’s say a woman is about to be raped, God has the power to stop it, but chooses not to because the rapist has free will. I can understand this point of view as free will is very valuable and is one of the characteristics of being human. But what about the free will of the woman? She obviously doesn’t want to get raped, so if God doesn’t interfere, someone’s free will is going to get violated anyway, so why not interfere on the side of the woman? This sort of makes me think that God is choosing the free will of a rapist over the well-being of an innocent woman, in what way could that possibly be moral?
It could be argued – and it has! – but these are easy to defeat.Also it could be argued this opens up a paradox.
Have you ever read the Book of Job? This is essentially the conundrum Job wrestles with. He knows that he’s a good guy, and yet, ‘unjust suffering’ has been visited upon him. In his suffering, he tries to understand: it seems to him that God is either unjust, or not all-powerful. God’s answer to Job, at the end of the book, might be helpful to you in your questions.God is all-powerful He is also completely and utterly kind.
Yet there is suffering.
So God is not all-powerful,
Conclusion there is no God