R
R_Daneel
Guest
When asked about God’s love and the existence of suffering, the unanimous answer by Christians is this: “God’s love is not contradicted by the existence of suffering. Love and necessary suffering are not mutually exclusive. Love and needless suffering would be mutually exclusive.”. Well, so far, so good. What they say is not just logical, but also perfectly reasonable.
When asked about the apperently needless suffering we all experience (first or second hand) the answer is much less satisfying. The Christians assert that contrary to all appearances, all those horrible sufferings must have some beneficial effects, which more than compensate for the suffering. Of course they can never bring up any specific answer, they just repeat that it is a matter of faith. Obviously, such an answer is unacceptable to non-Christians, who go by the duck principle, which says: “if it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, quacks like a duck, tastes like a duck, it is most probably a duck - and not an elephant”.
Translated: “if it looks like unnecessary suffering, if it cannot be explained why that suffering is necessary, then it is most probably unnecessary suffering”. But Christians have a retort this one, too. They maintain that we are not privy to the information which would explain why those sufferings are actually beneficial, and this lack of information prevents us from forming a proper value judgment. Now this one is sheer cop-out. But, let’s accept it provisionally, and examine its ramifications.
Do Christians act according to these principles? Not on your life. When Christians themselves suffer, they seek remedy. They don’t just wallow in their own suffering, they seek professional help, to alleviate their suffering. They may be willing to “endure” other people’s suffering and assert that those sufferings are “good for them”, but when it comes to their own skin, their acts belie their own words.
But it goes further than that:
According to the acts of the Catholic Church, there is unnecessary suffering in the world. Therefore - according to the acts of the Catholic Church - God allows unnecessary suffering. Therefore - according to the acts of the Catholic Church - God is not “loving”.
Think about it.
R. Daneel Olivaw
When asked about the apperently needless suffering we all experience (first or second hand) the answer is much less satisfying. The Christians assert that contrary to all appearances, all those horrible sufferings must have some beneficial effects, which more than compensate for the suffering. Of course they can never bring up any specific answer, they just repeat that it is a matter of faith. Obviously, such an answer is unacceptable to non-Christians, who go by the duck principle, which says: “if it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, quacks like a duck, tastes like a duck, it is most probably a duck - and not an elephant”.
Translated: “if it looks like unnecessary suffering, if it cannot be explained why that suffering is necessary, then it is most probably unnecessary suffering”. But Christians have a retort this one, too. They maintain that we are not privy to the information which would explain why those sufferings are actually beneficial, and this lack of information prevents us from forming a proper value judgment. Now this one is sheer cop-out. But, let’s accept it provisionally, and examine its ramifications.
Do Christians act according to these principles? Not on your life. When Christians themselves suffer, they seek remedy. They don’t just wallow in their own suffering, they seek professional help, to alleviate their suffering. They may be willing to “endure” other people’s suffering and assert that those sufferings are “good for them”, but when it comes to their own skin, their acts belie their own words.
But it goes further than that:
- About the suffering brought forth by natural causes. The Catholic Church maintains lots of hospitals, which are dedicated to lessening the suffering. If all the suffering would be beneficial in some manner, then it is obvious that lessening the existing suffering interferes with those beneficial effects. The doctors run the risk of alleviating the suffering prematurely and thus prevent those unspecified “benefits” to take place. So having these hospitals contradicts the words about suffering. The acts contradict the words. If all those sufferings are part of God’s plan for the sufferers, then the doctors attempt to interfere with God’s plan. Why do they do that? Because they believe that suffering is not good, suffering should be lessened and cured. Observe: dedicated Catholic doctors attempting to lessen the suffering. Mindboggling, if they really believed that all suffering is beneficial - somehow.
- About the suffering caused by human acts. The suffering caused by humans is called “evil” by the Church - thus expressing the unnecessary nature of such suffering. The perpetrators of such acts are called criminals, and are persecuted. But if all the suffering caused by these humans is necessary for some unspecified greater goods, then these people just further God’s plan for the victims. To condemn the tools whom God uses for his inscrutable purposes is incorrect. The perpetrators are just God’s tools. But the Church officially condemns genocides (correctly) as if she believed that such actions create unnecessary suffering. Unbelievable - if the Church says that all sufferings are necessary.
- Lastly, some posters ask if anyone can prove that there is unnecessary evil in the world. I think the answer is simple. Let’s not go by the words, lets go by the acts. The Catholic Church asserts that some mental health problems (and thus sufferings) are caused by demons, and even has official exorcists to expel those demons. Therefore it is obvious that the suffering caused by those demons must be unnecessary, since the Church is adamant to exorcise the cause of the suffering.
According to the acts of the Catholic Church, there is unnecessary suffering in the world. Therefore - according to the acts of the Catholic Church - God allows unnecessary suffering. Therefore - according to the acts of the Catholic Church - God is not “loving”.
Think about it.
R. Daneel Olivaw