T
Thales
Guest
I was wondering if anyone could help me out with the following theory written below. First of all I would like to know if it makes sense, and secondly, if it is theologically sound and does not conflict with the Bible or any Catholic teaching.
It seems as though understanding evil as a void of good is very plausible and provides solutions to some of the problems concerning Satan, the advent of evil, and the dilemma of a good God creating evil. Evil as the void of God and not a thing in itself, as darkness is not a thing but a void of light, the theory of evil being necessary for a mutable physical universe could be plausible without contradicting orthodox theology. With this premise, and knowing God is perfect and immutable and before anything else was He is and before any creation, God is all that is, we have to assume that any created thing that is not God Himself or a part of Himself must be to some degree outside of God which must necessarily be to some degree evil (evil is “not God”). God’s creation could have been created “very good”, as is stated in Genesis, but creation is not God and therefore is ultimately subject to being corrupted. God could have created things in a sense close to Himself and therefore good to a high degree, but being that creation is apart from God it has to fall on a sort of scale between the ultimate good (God) on one side and evil (not God) on the other. Being on this scale it is also ultimately subject to being corrupted and moving away from the good towards evil. Nature, and all created things for that matter, would only be corrupted from their original “good” state by either a will of their own or that of another entity other than God. With all this being said, when we consider the being of Satan or the Devil, we should not conflate this being with evil itself. Unlike God, who is the good, and we can say good is, evil is not, and thus cannot be synonymous with any entity. Entities and created things, like Satan, cannot be evil itself but move towards evil or away from God. Jesus says, “Why do you call Me good? No one is good except God alone. “(Mark 10:18), possibly meaning that created things can move towards God and goodness, but cannot be (the) good because they are not God. The same could be said of evil in a slightly different way—none can be evil, not even Satan, because evil is no thing. Whereas a created thing cannot be good because God is good; a thing cannot be evil because evil is no thing. Satan therefore, is an entity created good by God; a creature in the created universe (universe here referring to all of creation, physical and non-physical) having a will which chooses to move away from God and towards evil. He, being antithetical to God in all ways, desires to be one with evil as God is one with good, but Satan cannot do this, and resolves instead to draw all things away from God and thus towards evil.
This theory claims (a) evil is the void of God/good, as darkness is the void of light; (b) evil is necessary for creation because creation is outside of God and anything outside of God is not God and therefore to some degree evil/not-God; (c) Satan or the Devil is not the same as evil, but rather an entity fully dedicated to evil; (d) creation was made good by God, but subject to corruption or turning towards evil, for the fact that creation depends on the existence of evil.
Please, feel free to comment or critique and most of all ask for any clarification on aspect that may seem obscure.
It seems as though understanding evil as a void of good is very plausible and provides solutions to some of the problems concerning Satan, the advent of evil, and the dilemma of a good God creating evil. Evil as the void of God and not a thing in itself, as darkness is not a thing but a void of light, the theory of evil being necessary for a mutable physical universe could be plausible without contradicting orthodox theology. With this premise, and knowing God is perfect and immutable and before anything else was He is and before any creation, God is all that is, we have to assume that any created thing that is not God Himself or a part of Himself must be to some degree outside of God which must necessarily be to some degree evil (evil is “not God”). God’s creation could have been created “very good”, as is stated in Genesis, but creation is not God and therefore is ultimately subject to being corrupted. God could have created things in a sense close to Himself and therefore good to a high degree, but being that creation is apart from God it has to fall on a sort of scale between the ultimate good (God) on one side and evil (not God) on the other. Being on this scale it is also ultimately subject to being corrupted and moving away from the good towards evil. Nature, and all created things for that matter, would only be corrupted from their original “good” state by either a will of their own or that of another entity other than God. With all this being said, when we consider the being of Satan or the Devil, we should not conflate this being with evil itself. Unlike God, who is the good, and we can say good is, evil is not, and thus cannot be synonymous with any entity. Entities and created things, like Satan, cannot be evil itself but move towards evil or away from God. Jesus says, “Why do you call Me good? No one is good except God alone. “(Mark 10:18), possibly meaning that created things can move towards God and goodness, but cannot be (the) good because they are not God. The same could be said of evil in a slightly different way—none can be evil, not even Satan, because evil is no thing. Whereas a created thing cannot be good because God is good; a thing cannot be evil because evil is no thing. Satan therefore, is an entity created good by God; a creature in the created universe (universe here referring to all of creation, physical and non-physical) having a will which chooses to move away from God and towards evil. He, being antithetical to God in all ways, desires to be one with evil as God is one with good, but Satan cannot do this, and resolves instead to draw all things away from God and thus towards evil.
This theory claims (a) evil is the void of God/good, as darkness is the void of light; (b) evil is necessary for creation because creation is outside of God and anything outside of God is not God and therefore to some degree evil/not-God; (c) Satan or the Devil is not the same as evil, but rather an entity fully dedicated to evil; (d) creation was made good by God, but subject to corruption or turning towards evil, for the fact that creation depends on the existence of evil.
Please, feel free to comment or critique and most of all ask for any clarification on aspect that may seem obscure.