S
Sarpedon
Guest
We don’t have to assume that existence is better than nonexistence. The fact of the matter is that we exist, and God cannot benefit from either our existence or non-existence. Therefore, God cannot have a selfish motive for giving us existence, simply because He can’t improve Himself from us.What you say is quite logical. There are a few problems, however. First, it is based upon the assumption that existence (in and by itself) is somehow “better” than nonexistence. I don’t see how can you substantiate that. (I just hope that none of the nincompoops will ask if I would prefer not to exist. That nonsense has been uttered too many times before). Second, this alleged benevolence cannot be “exhausted” in the act af creation. God manifestly does not interfere in a benevolent fasion in our behalf.
In a certain sense you’re right in that selflessness is not necessarily tied to benevolence. It is possible to conceive that God could be perfectly evil and therefore create us, even though He cannot benefit, for no reason at all. The problem with this is that we only observe evil in the sense of selfish gain. At least in the human sphere, we never observe perfectly selfless evil. We do observe perfectly selfless good (or can easily conceive of what it would be), while we do not observe perfectly selfless evil. Therefore, it makes more sense to describe God’s necessarily selfless act in terms of an observed phenomena in reality rather than a unobserved and barely conceivable phenomena.
In regards to your second point, God’s benevolence is certainly not exhausted. I imagine that you are looking at the suffering the world and asking why God’s benevolence is not stopping that.
From the Catholic perspective, the ultimate goal of man is to develop perfectly selfless love, which then allows the person to enter into a fully consummated intimacy with God and man. This is what we are created for, and this is the only thing that can perfectly fulfill us. The phrase “created in the image of God” means that we are given free will and therefore the capacity to choose good or evil. Our good consists not only in choosing good as some practical goal, but to align ourselves so that our will and desires are selflessly directed toward God and man.
All other goods are secondary to this, including physical comfort and safety. God, in His benevolence allows sufferings to envelope us because suffering forces us to make choices and align our will one way or the other. A comfortable, apathetic existence is antithetical to our true good. God in His benevolence gives and takes away suffering as needed to move humanity towards it true end. This does not imply fatalism, for by overcoming suffering we are actually participating in God’s task of inviting and transforming our wills and desires into a selflessness that enables us to truly achieve the intimacy that will fulfill us. In our human intellect we cannot fully understand how the balance works out, but we can know that suffering is not necessarily an evil thing. While a person choosing to cause suffering is evil (it is an attempt to play God), and a person choosing to ignore suffering is evil (it is an attempt to escape the task), and a person choosing to accept suffering without trying to overcome it is evil (it is an attempt to survive without true change), nevertheless we would not be inclined to orient our wills and desires in the proper direction if God did not place obstacles in our path to righteously achieved and legitimate happiness.