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SalamKhan
Guest
You misunderstood the question, what is the nature of evil?In short, evil is sin against God.
So it had a beginning, and must therefore be created, for it is impossible for something to will its own existence. Who is the creator of evil?The sin of Adam and Eve.
That is called deductive analogy, and by doing that for the entity of Allah, you forfeit the right to hide behind the claim that “The Trinity is a mystery”. If you assert the attributes are identical to the divine entity, you must also assert that the attributes are identical to each other; thereby making it permissable to say that God rewards the righteous by His wrath, or that God is knowing by His sight (knowledge is related to both existent and non-existent things, whilst sight is related to existent things only). Moreover, your doctrine of divine simplicity, which asserts that formal or real distinctions cannot exist in God, is incompatible with your doctrine of the Trinity, which asserts that the distinction between the three hypostases is a real distinction.If the attributes are not separate from His entity then they are His entity. Unless you are saying that Allah’s entity is composed of distinct parts. If so, then a God that does not rely on attributes which are distinct from His entity is not as perfect as a God who is completely united in all his attributes.
We do not use deductive analogy from empirical knowledge to affirm for the entity of Allah what He has not affirmed for Himself. Such as the anthropomorphists who use deductive analogy from the statement of the Prophet (S), “your Lord is not one eyed”, in order to assert that Allah has two eyes (far is He above His creation!). Or the Christians who use deductive analogy from this created world of substances and accidents in order to assert that the entity of Allah is a substance.
We do not use deductive analogy from empirical knowledge to deny for Allah what He has affirmed. Such as the Mu
tazilites who used deductive analogy from the optics of this world to deny the ultimate reward of the vision of Allah. Or both Mutazilites and Christians who use deductive analogy to deny that Allah is the creator of evil.What is permissable to do, is to use deductive analogy from empirical knowledge for the effects of the attributes Allah has affirmed for Himself.
Your mistake is that you cannot distinguish between the will of Allah, and the command of Allah. The will of Allah always takes place regardless of whether His creation intends to fulfill it or not. In reality, Allah is neither benefited nor harmed by good and evil. The very meaning of tyranny or opression is infringing on the rights and ownership of others, but this cannot be attributed to Allah as He has dominion and ownership over all things, thus He has the right to take what He owns i.e. human life.I don’t think I’m making that distinction. To will something is different than to have it emanate. If evil is an effect of Allah’s will, then Allah wills what is sinful and therefore would contradict any perfection his being would have.
In the Catholic view, God does not will evil. He is the perfection of all good and wills only what is good.
It is indeed impossible for Allah to be attributed with imperfection, and having no power over His creation is an imperfection.