I’ve read multiple theologians and writings by lay Catholics that portray evil as a spoiled or corrupt form of goodness. The theology that I’ve seen on the belief that our wills are set after death is related to this idea. The idea seems to make intuitive sense, but it seems to be diametrically opposed to the concept of free will and all the theology that goes along with it. if Evil can’t be pursued for its own sake, but rather is only the result of pursuing something good in the wrong way, then how can our wills be said to be free at all?
Does anyone know if this problem is resolvable?
If we use the issue of abortion as a working example, you can bet the people who advocate abortion think they are doing something “good”. You know, it’s for the “good” of the woman, the “good” of society, only those children who are wanted will be born, the family will be able to afford to live and not waste more irreplaceable assets, etc.
The plain fact of the matter is that they’re committing murder, and it will be judged as such.
They call an evil “good” and believe it.
But they still have free will in that choice. So they’re responsible for their actions. I didn’t force them to do it - you didn’t force them to do it - God didn’t force them to do it. So they are responsible. I suppose Christ would say of them the very same thing He said of the Pharisees - “Forgive them Father, they don’t know what they’re doing!” As a consequence they can still be redeemed.
Even Hitler and the Nazis thought they were doing “good” - it was for the “good” of Germany; the human race would be strengthened as the strong would survive and the weak annihilated. They called a gross evil “good” and believed it.
That’s the sort of justification that humans use to endorse evil. We have to justify ourselves.
As for the fallen spiritual world, the orbit of the demons, they also were created “good”. But their fall was final, and irredeemable. I don’t know about individual demons, but in the case of Satan himself, Christ said he was a “liar from the beginning”.
So something went drastically wrong there, right from the very beginning.
Yet it would have been his own decision. And from the bit that I’ve seen of demonic “faces”, one thing seems to come through even more strongly than an appearance of evil -
sheer hatred.
The devil himself would therefore hate absolutely. So we’re talking about a different paradigm when we talk about “evil” in the spiritual world. It is far more potent. I don’t know whether they even care about justifying themselves. I don’t think they do.
But they still had free will in their original choice.