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Nate123
Guest
You said:“If watching a child die of leukemia is not horrific, then I don’t know what it is.”You keep forgetting, or so it seems, that I do not believe that God either sends or permits suffering, so the remainder of your points relative to me are invalid.
Point 1…you are really reaching.
On point 2…the Christian God supposedly knew that child’s outcome before they were even conceived.
- If watching a child die of leukemia is not horrific, then I don’t know what it is. I know it can’t be mitigated, but I simply take God out of the equation entirely. I won’t address terms like fantasy for obvious reasons.
I reply: We Catholics/Christians are blind and cannot see the horrors of the world for what they truly are. The truth is that the cancer that kills a child is horrific. The earthquake that kills millions is horrific. The selling of women into slavery is horrific. We have been scared of the horrors contradicting Gods all powerlessness and goodness. We have sold out on God and humanity. We gave false explanations and they have created a lot harm. Atheism is on the rise for such explanations. You did not sell out God or humaity and I thank you for it. A God that allows evil for a greater good is not worthy of love or praise. That “god” doesn’t exist.
God opposes the horrors with all of his power and holiness. He can only work through creatures. Many of them do not work for the good. Evil does not have the final word. In the redemption Christ has brought all disorder caused by sin to himself which are suffering and death. Christ has united all suffering to himself and we conquer these evils by becoming saviors (in union with him) to everyone who chooses heaven. He has made that the evils work for our salvation and one day heaven will thank us for what we went through for their salvation. In this way all suffering and death has no power over us.