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Guest
Hi Picky,
Sorry it’s been a while. I did not get a chance to read that book I mentioned yet. I’m still finishing a book by G.K. Chesterton on St. Thomas Aquinas.
So our key question being - why a seemingly ‘good / loving’ God would allow tragedy / suffering? ‘Problem of pain’
In order to address the low fruit of ‘well, God, if there is one, must not be that good or loving, to allow bad things to happen to good people’.
We first went through some reasoning that essentially boils down to, ‘I am here, because of this, He ( God) must want me’. Then defining that want, as love.
In defining God as Good / loving and understanding love does not force a reflection, we can conclude that man made acts of tragedy / suffering are free to be made because of God’s love for the person doing bad things.
Thus, the fact that we see man made tragedy / suffering is a sign of the freedom we have as humans by a loving God.
It would make more sense if we thought God was to control or disallow tragedy / suffering, to conclude God does not love! Because that would indicate less or no freedom for the human, more action by God.
Our ‘Why’ is still hanging out there, but i did want to take this one slow.
Thoughts?
Take care,
Mike
Sorry it’s been a while. I did not get a chance to read that book I mentioned yet. I’m still finishing a book by G.K. Chesterton on St. Thomas Aquinas.
So our key question being - why a seemingly ‘good / loving’ God would allow tragedy / suffering? ‘Problem of pain’
In order to address the low fruit of ‘well, God, if there is one, must not be that good or loving, to allow bad things to happen to good people’.
We first went through some reasoning that essentially boils down to, ‘I am here, because of this, He ( God) must want me’. Then defining that want, as love.
In defining God as Good / loving and understanding love does not force a reflection, we can conclude that man made acts of tragedy / suffering are free to be made because of God’s love for the person doing bad things.
Thus, the fact that we see man made tragedy / suffering is a sign of the freedom we have as humans by a loving God.
It would make more sense if we thought God was to control or disallow tragedy / suffering, to conclude God does not love! Because that would indicate less or no freedom for the human, more action by God.
Our ‘Why’ is still hanging out there, but i did want to take this one slow.
Thoughts?
Take care,
Mike