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―Which Thing I Never Had Supposed‖

The Problem of Evil and the Problem of Man

Loyd Ericson

Claremont Graduate University

SMPT 2010

The problem of evil as a challenge to God's existence had led philosophers of religion to

see the problem as a call to defend God and seek for arguments through which both God and evil

could co-exist. This response, I will argue, is misplaced. The true challenge of evil is not in the

question of God's existence in light of this evil but in the devaluation of the human individual

who experiences and/or witnesses suffering. Attempts to defend evil's existence and analogize

God as a chess-master maneuvering through evil only exacerbate the problem by turning

individuals who suffer into valueless sacrificial pawns for God's ultimate win. A better response

to the evil in the world is not a defense of God through the justification of evil but rather a

justification of the individual through the confrontation of suffering. The Atonement, especially

as understood by liberation theology, is the paradigm of God's own response to the problem of

evil.

Part I – The Problem of Evil

The problem of evil, in its various forms, is almost always viewed as a problem for God‘s

existence. The question posed is simply one of how it is possible for there to exist an all-
powerful, all-knowing, and all-loving God in light of all of the evil and suffering we witness in

the world. If God is all-powerful, then he would be capable of preventing evil; if all-knowing,

then he would know of potential evil to be prevented; and if all-loving, then he would have the

loving desire to prevent evil. Because evil is present in the suffering we witness around us, it is

concluded that God (who is defined as being—among other things—all-powerful, all-knowing,

and all-loving) does not then exist. While evil in this context is usually broken down into moral

and natural evil, for the purpose of this paper I am simply going to define evil as the physical,

emotional, and psychological suffering of human beings.

The traditional responses to the problem of evil typically come in two forms: the free-will

defense and the soul-making theodicy. The former, the free-will defense, argues that free-will is

such a high good that God restrains himself from interceding into the world to allow his creatures

to be free. Human suffering is an unfortunate side effect of that free will. Thus God permits evils,

even as horrendous as the Holocaust, in order to maintain free-will for his creatures. On the

other-hand, a soul-making theodicy argues that God allows suffering and evil in order to either

teach us something important, give us the opportunity to be (or learn to be) moral, bring us closer

to God, and over-all improve the moral and spiritual quality of our souls. Such a theodicy is

perhaps expressed in Doctrine & Covenants, section 122 when Jesus tells Joseph Smith, who was

unjustly suffering in Liberty Jail:

And if thou shouldst be cast into the pit, or into the hands of murderers, and the
sentence of death passed upon thee; if thou be cast into the deep; if the billowing surge
conspire against thee; if fierce winds become thine enemy; if the heavens gather
blackness, and all the elements combine to hedge up the way; and above all, if the very
jaws of hell shall gape open the mouth wide after thee, know thou, my son, that all these
things shall give thee experience, and shall be for thy good. (D&C 122:7)

In other words, whether we recognize it or not, the evil and suffering we witness in the world is

allowed by God for the good of our souls.


Before moving forward, let‘s examine this with a quick example: Last week a young 13

year old girl—we‘ll name her Jane—was kidnapped while walking home from school. She was

brutally raped, tortured, murdered, and left in a shallow mountain-side grave by her kidnapper. If

we applied this to the problem of evil, that this occurred either meant that God was unable to

prevent this from happening, did not know of it happening, or did not care enough about the

young girl to prevent it. Thus, one might say, that this evil occurred is evidence that God does

not exist.

Those upholding the free-will defense might argue that, to the contrary, God was able,

knowing, and emotionally wanting to stop Jane‘s rape and murder. He, however, willed not to do

so in order to maintain the greater good of the killer‘s and the rest of his creation‘s free-will.

Adding to this, those opting for the soul-making theodicy might also argue that God may have

allowed this horrendous evil in order to provide either Jane‘s, the killer‘s, and/or some or all of

the rest of society an opportunity to improve their soul.

There are, however, some key challenges for Latter-day Saints who wish to appeal to the

free-will defense. First, while the free-will defense may work in logically defending a certain

view of God, the sterile God that does not interject himself to prevent suffering hardly seems to

be the God of Mormonism. Rather than not interjecting himself into the world and not

interceding into human affairs to prevent evil, the God of LDS scripture is one who is described

as miraculously preventing evil, alleviating suffering, and changing the hearts of his creations.

This God who worked miracles to free the Israelites from Egyptian oppression, raised the dead,

healed the sick, stepped in to transform Alma the Younger, protected the pioneers, and stepped in

to miraculously save Zion‘s camp seems entirely different from the free-will defended God who

chooses to stay his hand and not prevent evils in order to maintain human free-will. Furthermore,
the prayers of Latter-day Saints and other theists throughout the world include petitions for

healing, food, liberation, peace, and to change the hearts of prodigal children and friends. These

prayers are made with the belief that God does in fact intercede to change the current state of

things and prevent suffering.

Second, not only does the free-will defense seem incompatible with the God of Mormon

scripture and history, this view of free-will and the prevention of suffering go against our own

experience and common-sense understanding of the two. When my four year old nephew crashes

on his bicycle and scuffs up his elbow, it would seem odd to argue that I was infringing upon his

free-will by responding to his cries, picking him up, and helping him recover from his pain.

When someone gives a warm bowl of soup to a homeless and hungry child, when a

philanthropist engineers sustainable crops for a drought-ridden third-world country, or when a

medic injects a dying bullet-ridden soldier with pain-relieving narcotics, it would again seem odd

for someone to argue that the freedom to starve, die, or suffer was being taken away from these

persons. If I witnessed Jane‘s kidnapping, but refused to intervene in order to maintain the

kidnapper‘s free-will, others would look at me with a bewildered disgust. And yet those

appealing to a free-will defense would argue that God does not do these very same things in

order to not violate human free-will.

Similar challenges arise from the perspective of a soul-making theodicy. If God is

allowing Jane‘s rape, torture, and murder for the greater good of some soul-making objective,

who am I to interrupt God‘s will? If such suffering would, in fact, lead to a greater good, then by

my interceding into the affair I am actually preventing a greater good from occurring. If taken to

the logical extreme where all suffering is permitted by God to create a greater good, and thus no

unnecessary suffering exists, by my permitting suffering to occur—or even committing these


evils myself—I would be actually adding to the greater good of the world and assisting God with

his soul-making process.

There are, however, some important responses that the philosophers and theodicists can

(and do) make to these challenges. First, those appealing to the free-will defense may argue that

there is a key difference between God‘s interruption and my interruption of the kidnapper‘s free-

will. In my case, even though I would be interrupting the free-will of the killer, it would

nevertheless be my free choice to do so. Thus, the world of free creatures would remain intact

without outside intervention. On the other hand, if God were to intervene, it would be an instance

of a person‘s free-will being negated without any person‘s free-will being affirmed, and would

be a violation of the world of free-creatures.

Second, those arguing for a soul-making theodicy may point out that there is another

important difference between God‘s and my possible intervention. It may be the case that Jane‘s

kidnapping was allowed for my own soul-building process. Thus, because my intervention (or

non-intervention) when witnessing the kidnapping may (or surely would) act as part of a soul-

making process for myself, it cannot be compared to God‘s non-intervention as he would not

need such a process.

Finally, it may be argued that God does intercede occasionally or often; we, however, are

just unaware of it happening. With this view, all suffering which does not (or is unlikely to) lead

to a greater good is actually prevented by God. Thus, each instance of suffering which occurs

does so because God knew that it would actually lead to some greater good—or at least that the

probability and/or quality of the resulting good was worth the risk of allowing it. Because God

leaves no trace of the potential unnecessary suffering which he prevented, we have no

knowledge of God‘s intervention. (There may be innumerable instances of young girls making it
home safely each day, not knowing that God miraculously prevented their kidnapping behind the

scenes.) In order to provide a sufficient logical response to the problem of evil, the theodicists

require that all actualized suffering has been allowed by God in order to promote the greater

good by maintaining free-will or supporting a soul-building process. Any suffering that did not

meet this criteria would then act as evidence against God‘s existence.

It should noted that these responses clearly approach the problem of evil from a

believer‘s perspective, where God‘s existence is assumed a priori and left unquestioned. Because

these responses to the problem seek to explain how both God and evil can exist, and because

God‘s existence is assumed without justification, their responses ultimately attempt to justify and

explain the existence of suffering. From these attempts, it seems that we can draw out two

important conclusions: First, the sufferings that we witness are necessary sources for, or

unfortunate by-products of, a greater good. In other words, while they may be extremely

unpleasant, any and all actual suffering is beneficial for God‘s plan for himself and humanity.

Second, because much of this suffering is experienced by victims who die from their trauma and

thus do not directly benefit themselves, God allows for unwilling victims to suffer for the benefit

of others.

With this in mind, let us return to our previous example of Jane. Imagine that while the

kidnapped teen is being raped and tortured by her predator, she prays to God and asks: ―Why

me? Why is this happening to me?‖ In answer to her prayers, a philosopher of religion comes to

her and tells her: ―Jane, God is allowing your suffering because he doesn‘t want to interfere with

this man‘s free-will. While your pain is great, it is much more important that this man is able to

do as he chooses.‖ Or perhaps the philosopher of religion tells her: ―Jane, you are suffering

unbearable pain. God certainly has the power to help you, but there is a greater good or some
soul-making value that your pain and suffering is going to make possible for someone else.‖ Or

perhaps, he puts it simply: ―Jane, you perhaps have not asked to be raped, tortured, and killed.

However, if you saw the big picture—God‘s eternal plan— you would realize that you are

merely one of millions that God has allowed to suffer for his ultimate goal. It is all for good.‖

In the theodicists attempts to defend God from the problem of evil, God is portrayed as

both allowing and supporting evil. Rather than seeing suffering as that which ought to be

confronted, suffering is that which is ultimately defended.

Part II – The Problem of Man

While suffering is defended and justified as being necessary for God‘s plan, it is unclear

whether each of us individually shares that necessity. As D.Z. Phillips points out,

When a sense of the limits of human existence has led to bewilderment and to the
natural cry, ―Why is this happening to me?‖, ―Why are things like this?‖, it is essential to
note that these questions are asked, not for want of explanations, but after explanations
have provided all they can offer. The questions seem to seek for something that
explanations cannot give. This is what theodicies . . . fail to realize.1

For the believer, the problem of evil is not about the existence of God. Just as with the

philosophers‘ response to the problem, God‘s existence is already believed and assumed. Rather,

the problem of evil reveals the problem of man which questions the individuals valued existence.

The problem of man asks: while God may have a plan for humanity, does he have a plan for each

individual? Or are they like the ant whose individual existence is negligible in comparison to the

colony? A theodicy or defense which values and defends the suffering over that of the sufferer

only serves to magnify the problem.

1
PEPG, 134.
Perhaps this is what Moses experienced following his revelation recorded in the first

chapter of the Book of Moses. After being shown ―the world and the ends thereof, and all the

children of men which are, and which were created,‖ Moses wakes up and says to himself:

―Now, for this cause I know that man is nothing, which thing I never had supposed‖ (Moses 1:8,

10). After witnessing the seemingly endless numbers of children which God had placed on the

earth, is it at all surprising that Moses would announce that his own life is nothing in

comparison. Like the Monty Python Sketch, ―Live Organ Transplants,‖ where a woman is told in

song about the almost unimaginable size of the universe, how can we not respond with her and

Moses and say, ―Makes you feel so, sort of, insignificant, doesn't it?‖

God tells Moses that his creations are endless and that he is going to show Moses just one

part of it. Moses then sees the world and every person on it. Like the woman, suddenly he is

insignificant, he is nothing. He is merely a single grain in an eternal beach of sand. To make

things even worse, the scriptures say that after having this vision, ―the presence of God withdrew

from Moses, that his glory was not upon Moses; and Moses was left unto himself.‖ Moses was

suddenly small, insignificant, and alone. Like Tyler Durden in the movie Fight Club, this

realization can be telling him and us: ―Listen up, maggots. You are not special. You are not a

beautiful or unique snowflake. You are the same decaying organic matter as everything else.‖

A quick response by believers might be an appeal to God‘s knowledge of each of us

individually. Like Jesus, they might respond, ―Consider the lilies how they grow: they toil not,

they spin not. . . . If God so clothe the grass, which is to day in the field, and to morrow is cast

into the oven; how much more will he clothe you, O ye of little faith?‖ But what does this say to

the Cambodian sex slave, the child suffering of bone-cancer, or even the lonely and forgotten

widow?—those who, unlike the adorned lilies, feel like trampled weeds unrecognizable in an
open field. If God‘s love for the lilies is expressed by their adornment, what does the allowed—

or even promoted—rape and torture of Jane say of her?

In an effort to defend God‘s existence against evil, has the individual‘s own identity and

valued existence been denied? Has the dependency on free-will for the greater good or a

theodicy of soul-making for the whole rendered our own individual existence meaningless and

irrelevant?

If God is, as William James and Peter Geach (among many others) have put it, ―like some

grand master of chess‖ who maneuvers through free-will and suffering to achieve his win, then

are some of us his sacrificial pawns, who are discarded and thrown to the rook?

If we believe that God is all-powerful and all-loving, is the intense and meaningless

suffering of an individual indicative of the insignificance of the individual in God‘s eyes—

especially in a tradition where the miraculous interventions of God are affirmed? Or in other

words, while God may love his children as a whole, can not the sufferer ask, ―But does God love

me?‖

To emphasize this sense of loss and insignificance felt by Moses, it seems then to be no

coincidence that it is at this very moment that Satan appears to him—to attack him at his

weakest. The scripture continues: ―And it came to pass that when Moses had said these words,

behold, Satan came tempting him, saying: Moses, son of man, worship me.‖

In response to Satan‘s temptations, Moses scoffed at Satan saying, ―Who art thou? For

behold, I am a son of God, in the similitude of his Only Begotten; and where is thy glory, that I

should worship thee?‖ (Moses 1:13). Moses‘ claim and defense that he is a son of God seems at

first to be declaration that he is a spiritual child of God—as we usually understand that phrase

today. However, within the context of the Book of Moses, a son of God is not something that one
is by virtue of being human, but is rather is what one becomes through conversion to Christ.2 As

Enoch says a few chapters later: ―Behold, our father Adam taught these things [of Christ], and

many have believed and become the sons of God‖ (Moses 7:1).

Part III – The Atonement as Liberation

The problem of man brought on by the problem of evil presents each of us with two

related challenges. First, despite the theodicies and defenses, a vast amount of suffering exists in

the word—suffering that not only affects the individuals it directly inflicts, but also all those who

witness its evil. Such suffering—especially in light of these theodicies—can leave sufferer

questioning the value of their own existence. Second, we as living individuals are in many ways

nothing in comparison to the eternal scheme of things. The world was not constructed around

us—As much as I want to believe it, the world does not revolve around me. At any moment I

could become the victim of pain, suffering, and/or death. Nobody is free from this. And in the

history books of future generations I will most likely not even appear as a footnote.

What then is the appropriate response? I believe that a answer that should help us toward

understanding God‘s own response to the problem of evil can be found in the writings of

liberation theologians, particularly those of Latin America. Far from the philosophers of religion

who argued that the correct response to the problem of evil was to defend God through the

justification of evil, according to these theologians God‘s response—in as what we would call

the Atonement of Christ—is to defend the individual through the confrontation of suffering.

A key to understanding the liberation theologian‘s conception of the Atonement is

perhaps best illustrated by Ignacio Ellacuria when he writes that the question ―‗why did Jesus
2
Thanks to Charles Harrell for pointing this out to me.
die[?]‘ is inseparable from the [question] ‗why did they kill him[?]‘‖3 His friend Jon Sobrino

touches on this more when he says:

Persons who preach an exclusively transcendent [Kingdom] of God do not get


themselves murdered. People who preach a [Kingdom] that is only a new relationship
with God, or only ―love,‖ or only ―reconciliation,‖ or only ―trust in God,‖ are not
murdered. All these things may be legitimately regarded as elements accompanying the
message of the [Kingdom] of God, but they alone do not explain Jesus‘ death, and
therefore they alone cannot be the central element of the [Kingdom]. The [Kingdom] of
God must have had some bearing on the historico-social, not only the transcendent.4

According to the thought of Ellacuria and Sobrino, God as Jesus did not come to earth simply to

be hung on the cross to absolve persons of some sort of transcendent or metaphysical sin with a

transcendent or metaphysical grace. Rather than coming to earth to die, God came to earth to live

a life that both confronted sin and taught his followers to do the same. By this, the cross is not a

symbol of violent sacrificial death for the sake of sacrifice. Instead, to them the cross signifies

the question ―why did they kill him.‖ It is when we ask this question that we come to realize that

Jesus was not capitally punished for simply teaching of love and transcendence, but he was

rather murdered for confronting oppressive systems and trying to liberate the oppressed from

their suffering. The value of the cross is that it symbolizes, points to, and embodies the life that

Jesus of Nazareth lived. [Mention Braveheart]

But, some may argue (as some of you surely feel), the scriptures are clear that Jesus died

for our sins and the sins of the world. To this, those who argue for a liberation theology would

answer, yes, Jesus died for the sins of the world. However Ellacuria adds,

We must ask in all seriousness what the sin of the world is today, or in what forms the sin
of the world appears today. . . . If we look at the reality of the world as a whole from the
perspective of faith, we see that the sin of the world is sharply expressed today in what
must be called unjust poverty. Poverty and injustice appear today as the great negation of
God‘s will and as the annihilation of the desired presence of God among human beings.5

3
COFP, 547.
4
CPOTRog, 366.
5
HOCS, 278.
While these liberation theologians focused on what they referred to as ―the option for the poor,‖

the essence of their message could be easily expanded to suffering in general. God‘s response,

then, to the problem of evil was the Atonement. This was not just a soteriological atonement, but

was an atonement that confronted the historical and material sins of the world: poverty and

suffering.

Furthermore, by understanding the Atonement as not just transcendent, but rather

emphasizing the very real and material suffering of humans, God shows that his response to

suffering is not to justify or understand it, but to confront and end suffering at its roots. When

this is understood, our own indentify and purpose as Christians should also be understood.

According to Sobrino:

Christian spirituality is no more and no less than a living of the fundamental spirituality
that we have described, precisely in the concrete manner of Jesus and according to the
spirit of Jesus. This is the following of Jesus. . . . Jesus was not merely vere homo, truly a
human being; he was precisely homo verus—the true, authentic, genuine human being. . .
. [T]o be truly a human being is to be what Jesus is. To live with the spirit, to react
correctly to concrete reality, is to re-create, throughout history, the fundamental structure
of the life of Jesus.6

It is through this process that we encounter God: Sobrino continues, ―The believer who follows

Jesus, who lives in history, who makes history and suffers it, finds himself or herself confronted

with truth, life, cross, and hope. All of this is placed by the individual in reference to the mystery

of God.‖ Crossing out the believer‘s nothingness, ―this mystery comes forth to meet the

individual, as well, giving him or her a concrete, nonstransferable name. . . . In giving us names,

God enters into a personal relationship with us.‖7

Just as Moses was able to find value and pride in his existence by his conversion to Christ

and confronting Satan with: ―I am a son of God, in the similitude of his Only Begotten,‖ for the
6
SATFOJ, 694.
7
Ibid., 699
liberation theologian, it is also by living the life of Christ by confronting evil, just as Jesus did,

that we come to realize our own value in the world. To intervene and prevent Jane from being

abducted by her kidnapper is to be a follow of Christ. To confront systems that oppress other is

to be a follower of Christ. To push for—dare I say—social and economic justice in a world that

teaches that suffering from poverty is a good moral lesson is to be a follower of Christ.

Conclusion

While the problem of evil is perhaps a genuine philosophical problem, for the believer

evil does not present itself as a problem for God, but as a problem for her own individual value

and existence. Attempts to defend God from the philosophical problem fails to recognize this

problem of man, and ultimately results in the justification and defense of suffering—which then

serves to amplify the real problem. God‘s response—according to a theology of liberation—is to

defend the individual through confronting evil. God, as Jesus, came to earth to set the example of

how each of us must become like him by confronting the suffering we witness in the world. This

addresses the problem of man by both confronting suffering and giving the individual a valued

purpose in a world that might otherwise leave her feeling insignificant. While I imagine that

many Mormon theologians would be uncomfortable with the idea due to a long tradition tied to a

gospel of transcendent atonement, I believe that a gospel of liberating atonement is a perspective

that has been far too ignored.

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