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anEvilAtheist
Guest
I do consider the problem of evil to be perhaps the biggest apparent contradiction with the Catholic conception of God. But there are certainly others. However, for me the reason that I am an atheist is based not on these contradictions, but on the lack of evidence. I am willing to believe in things that I don’t understand and that are unproven, but I am not willing to believe in things if I think the evidence points towards their non-existence. I do not think there is any good evidence for the Catholic God, or the God of any other religion. So as of now, I have not yet seen enough evidence for me to believe, even if every single apparent contradiction were resolved.EvilAtheist
*And any God that was able to create the Garden of Eden is able to create a world with less natural evil. *
This is the bottom line for you, isn’t it? Or is it?
In other words, if this question were answered to your satisfaction, would you still have a hundred other objections to this mean God?
And if you would, life would just always be you sitting in the judgment seat, instead of God. And there would be no end of God’s needing to account to you, but I guess no need at all for you to account to Him.
I know it’s not a new argument. I just don’t think it’s ever been satisfactorily resolved. Even when I read top modern theologians, their answers seem incomplete.Your argument is not new. The mystery of evil is as old as the story of Job, an innocent man who suffered many evils to test his faith. He never wavered and trusted God to the end. Some people have their faith blown away with a cough.
Or maybe God’s testing me by having me explore Catholicism, instead of the true religion, whatever that may be. I know some atheists fall back to the lack of evidence line when they really just haven’t looked into the issue, but I sincerely believe that there is not any good evidence for the God of Catholicism.Right now God is allowing you to be tested with the mystery of evil.
Can you pass the test?