Not true. Only if we were also deprived of our imagination. Even if there were no examples of someone falling under a train and having his leg amputated, we could still imagine it.
This is because imagination is built on experience. You cannot imagine what you have absolutely no experience of in any way. Hence, a blind person cannot imagine colors. My point still stands.
spock:
Which is just another empty assertion, with nothing to support it.
It is a response built on Christian revelation. You don’t have to accept it, but you are the one asking a Christian response to a question that doesn’t even make sense unless you grant God, Satan, good and evil, etc. exist.
spock:
Agreed, not illogical, but unsupported.
Ok, so we move from you claiming it as “unreasonable” to it being “unsupported.” It is a claim about the Christian faith Spock. In the same way as the phrase “Jesus Christ is the Son of God.” It has never been claimed to be mathematically demonstrable.
So this point is really a straw man, unless you came on a Christian forum, asked Christians for their answer, and then, once they’ve made a solid response, told them that Christianity is “unsupported” in the first place. Why waste your time?
spock:
Personal? I would venture to say that this preference is universal. I have no knowledge of anyone who actively an purposefully seeks of pain and suffering. Every society attempts to maintain its balance by creating a judicial system to avoid “evil”.
There is mcuh dispute between a universe with painful, though ultimately desirable, “soul making” and one that doesn’t have any pain at all.
spock:
Again, who cares about the patience of these martyrs? Do the martyrs actively seek out that martyrdom? If they do, they are insane.
Does the dog actively seek out a vet? Christianity claims that, regardless of what our personal preference is, a lot of the pain that we experience is
good for us, in our current condition. You may punish your son, for instance, because he needs correction. This concept really isn’t so hard to understand.
Now, I also maintain that the fall was not necessary (even for creatures with freedom), so the above point only follows for people like those in our current condition. God, however, wanting to display many effects and create a universe with diverse harmony and grades of being, chose to allow some beings to fail.
The free and willing patience of martyrs is one of the things that pleases God, which would not be there were there no evil.
spock:
I would accept any answer which would be rational and reasonable.
If you wish to assert that “God makes some greater good from every evil”, prove it!
That would be impossible, because I would have to know the future, know the secret thoughts of every heart, and be perfectly just and good in my judgments.
Christianity involves claims that cannot be proven. “God brings good out of evil” is one such claim. I can give some examples of that happening: an alcoholic looses his job and hits rock bottom, lives a month in the streets, and is moved to actively seek help. He is humbled by his pain, sees his dependence on God, finds religion and becomes a better person. I cannot, of course, “prove” every single evil bringing about a greater good.
This is only one hypothetical example. But there is more involved in the “brings greater good out of evil” idea. There is also the idea that “God wants to display his effects.”
God is the highest good, and he loves his own goodness more than any created goodness. This is because his being is goodness itself. Now, although he is infinitely simple, he wants to display his being in a multitude of ways throughout his creation. He wants to make the universe a sort of symphony, so to speak, where one note accents another or is followed by another. Now, he wanted,
of his own good pleasure, to allow certain beings to fail, in order to make a more harmonious and fitting universe. Were there no evil, justice and holy hatred of evil would not be displayed, for instance.
We don’t claim to prove every claim, so your point is a bit of a straw man. If Christianity claimed to be mathematics, you would have a case. As it is, it says “this is what we believe.” We can answer questions about that belief, to show it is not against reason, but we cannot demonstratively prove it. Indeed, if we could, there would be no debate. There would also be no faith.