No objection at all. Please continue. I am most interested in seeing your thoughts.
You asked for it… and with a smile too!
So we are left with
natural limitations and
learned-natural limitations. What in the world is God thinking with these two? Why are they still around? Why are they there in the first place? How can this be the “optimal” situation created by the omnipotent and all-good Christian God?
There are two ways to address these concerns as a Christian, and I think both of them are convincing, that is, I think that both of them explain how a Christian can reasonably say that God is omnipotent and all-good and yet still acknowledge the reality of the limitations on our freedom that we have outlined. I do not claim to prove God’s existence with what follows but only hope to explain how a Christian can exist without being a walking contradiction in this particular area.
WAY THE FIRST (

)
If we assume that both *natural limitations *and *learned-natural limitations *come from God, then I say that both kinds of limitations work for our ultimate good in ways that are not known to us, and perhaps will never be known to us. This is perfectly reasonable if God is omniscient and knows what is best for us even better than we do, something which I and the Catholic Church certainly do believe.
Let’s flash back to the 9/11 attacks. I could not help the people in those buildings because I was (and am) limited by the laws of nature: I cannot fly or lift boulders or do any number of things that would have been useful. Why? Because the evil that would have resulted from God making it possible for me to save those people ultimately would have been greater than any good that would have resulted from me saving those people. This is true even if neither I nor anyone else is able to understand why, precisely because we do not a full knowledge and understanding of everything as God does.
There is one major thing that I could see resulting from my being able to save the 9/11 victims: It would disrupt cause and effect, it would stop the consequences of an action. The terrorists slammed jets into the World Trade Center and there were consequences to their decision to do so, namely, the buildings fell and people died. This might sound obtuse, but perhaps those people dying in that way and at that time was better than them dying in another way at another time. How are we to know? But God does know such things. Furthermore, God does not typically take away the negative consequences of our actions because to do so would be to diminish the value of our free will. What kind of god would only allow good consequences to take place? What kind of god would eliminate all bad consequences of bad actions? Certainly not the God of the Old and the New Testaments. A god who would will for bad consequences to be reversed would be a god who is really a tyrant, a king of robots, or at least of people who are reduced to living a life in which their choices do not matter.
And what of
learned-natural limitations? Those come from nature, too. Why are they around? Why am I afraid of heights? I suggest that these kinds of limitations are learned for our survival and are reactions in certain situations. Let’s say they come from God, since God created nature and nature instills
learned-natural limitations. We can say the same thing about these limitations as we did about the *natural limitations *above, that is, God knows what’s ultimately best, and lets that happen. Also,
learned-natural limitations are effective only in so far as we let them be effective. This should be obvious from personal experience: I can and have climbed something tall, I just don’t like to. The problem seems to be more with me that with anything I learned from nature. A fear of heights, for example, is reasonable and good in a way, but my particular fear of heights goes out of control at times because me, myself, and I, because I ultimately choose to let it effect my choices about what to climb or not climb.
WAY THE SECOND
But I am skeptical about whether a Christian MUST say that both *natural limitations *and *learned-natural limitations *come from God. If a Christian can say that God is not fully responsible for the way nature currently is, then he could also reasonably say that God is not responsible for any limitations of nature on our freedom to do good or evil. And indeed, Catholics believe emphatically that God originally intended for things to be quite different than they are. The problem and change for the worse was not with God but with man: Adam, Eve, and the Fall. As a result of original sin, mankind was separated from God. What this separation had to do with the laws and nature and “the way things are” now nobody can say, but it is perfectly reasonable for the Christian to say that it DID have SOME effect. Thus Catholics can believe that the limitations of nature were not in God’s original plan and so not from God at all.
I agree very much with you, Spock, that “this world is not optimal at all.” But I do not believe that God intended it to be less than optimal. I believe the world and mankind are the way they are because of man’s decision.
For more reading on both of these arguments, and especially the second, see the
Catechism of the Catholic Church here:
benedettoxvi.va/archive/catechism/p1s2c1p7.htm (part 1, section 2, chapter 1, paragraph 7). See also
The Problem of Pain by C.S. Lewis. He does a
brilliant job.
CONCLUSION: Any limitations on our freedom to do good or evil either 1) are for our greater good (way the first) or 2) are not from God (way the second).