B
bquinnan
Guest
My sons and I were having a discussion, and while we all agree that God is good, we had trouble with the question of how good is defined. For example, when we say that God is good, are we saying that God is good according to a standard of good that exists apart from Him? (This seems highly problematic to me as I write it out, as we believe that nothing exists apart from Him.) Does God will things because they are good, or is whatever He wills automatically good, because His will makes it so? That would make the statement “God is good” redundant, we are defining good as whatever He happens to will.
This led to a couple of secondary questions – first, does God have free will? It would seem to me that He does, as otherwise we would be saying that something is impossible for Him, and in fact, that we are capable of something that He is not. However, one of my sons was puzzled about how God could have free will if the decisions He makes are always going to conform to His nature, which is to choose the greatest good. Then there was the question of whether God is incapable of evil because, either a) no act can be evil if it is done by God, or because b) He would never choose something that was evil due to His nature. Of course, this assumes that good or evil can be determined in some way other than their relationship to God’s will.
Anyway, does anyone know of any good Catholic resources on these questions? Has St. Thomas Aquinas addressed this somewhere, perhaps?
This led to a couple of secondary questions – first, does God have free will? It would seem to me that He does, as otherwise we would be saying that something is impossible for Him, and in fact, that we are capable of something that He is not. However, one of my sons was puzzled about how God could have free will if the decisions He makes are always going to conform to His nature, which is to choose the greatest good. Then there was the question of whether God is incapable of evil because, either a) no act can be evil if it is done by God, or because b) He would never choose something that was evil due to His nature. Of course, this assumes that good or evil can be determined in some way other than their relationship to God’s will.
Anyway, does anyone know of any good Catholic resources on these questions? Has St. Thomas Aquinas addressed this somewhere, perhaps?