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TheTrueCentrist
Guest
You haven’t answered the question. If I say: “Mother Teresa was a good woman” what am I saying about Mother Teresa if I use good as defined by Gods nature?"TheTrueCentrist writes:
You are asking for a justification for why the Good (God) is the Good? God’s nature defines the good. This is a plausible end to the otherwise infinite regression of justifications of the good, which those who define good as “minimization of suffering” are left to wallow in. Why is the “minimization of suffering” good? Because we desire minimization of suffering? How does the fact of what we desire lead to the value statement of what we ought to desire? Etc., etc., etc.
Does having more happy people make the world better? Perhaps, but in a finite world you can only fit so many people. This does not address the possibility of a sinless world.Let’s say God chooses a world wherein there is no suffering at all. Can this world be made better still? Sure it can. It can include one more person who is happy, satisfied, and experiencing no suffering at all, but only a blissful rapture of permanent happiness. No matter how great the world is, it can always be greater, better, etc. The fact that God cannot create the “best of all possible worlds” is, therefore, true; not because He is not omnipotent, but because He is omnipotent, i.e., because the “best of all possible worlds” is self-referentially incoherent.
He does not have to eliminate the potential for evil or our ability to choose evil in order to create a world without evil. Either it is possible to have an entirely good world with free will, or free will always cause sin. One of those two propositions must be true, there is no acceptable third option (e.g. no worlds have free will.)And, once again, God’s picking and choosing a world wherein there would be no free choice of evil is functionally equivalent to eliminating free will from creation altogether.
Also, consider that the catholic doctrine of heaven states that in heaven it will be impossible for humans to sin, yet they will retain free will.
Do you suppose God was surprised when mankind fell into sin? Perhaps he thought to himself “didn’t see that coming?” No, such a position is risible, God created our world in its entirety all at once. “To God, all moments of time are present in their immediacy.” (CCC 600)If we are going to talk seriously about the reality of free will, then we must acknowledge the necessary potential for evil. There is nothing immoral, and there is nothing we cannot apprehend, in the fact that a perfect God created this world in perfection, and that, in consequence of free will, human beings fell into sin. The only morally objectionable action suggested on this thread would be for God to choose the “best of all possible worlds,” only after consulting His truth-table.
How then do you suppose God should chose which possible world to make? Is it random? Is this the best possible world?
But why go through all that trouble? God in this scenario sounds like a careless homeowner who chose a roofing company at random and they did a bad job. He had to address the problem with stop-gap measures before finally redoing the whole thing.Again, God did not create an evil world. The world became evil through the wrong use of free will in God’s creatures.
Moreover, God’s ability to take an evil and turn it into good (for instance, the crucifixion of Christ) does not in any way equate evil with good; the evil is evil and the good is good. Yet, good triumphs over evil. This is the eschatological argument against the problem of evil, namely, that God will heal the world of every evil on the Last Day, i.e., that God created a world without evil, and that, despite our fall into sin, He will return heaven and earth to this pre-fallen state for all eternity.
Sure, a healed world will be great, but there are still going to be a bunch of souls in hell that didn’t have to be there.
If God defines good, then God could create any arbitrary world, including one with completely opposite values to our own, and still be “good.”Is there a possible world in which God (a good, holy, loving, and perfect God, i.e., the God of Jesus Christ) and evil exist?