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Published byDonald Booth Modified over 8 years ago
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Week 11 Review
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From Last Week… Proponents of moral relativism sometimes point to John 8:1-11 as an example of Jesus practicing moral relativism. How would you respond to this?
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From Last Week… Support for situational ethics is claimed in the story of Rahab in Joshua 2 (a similar example is used of sheltering Jews in Nazi Germany). What would you say to this?
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From Last Week… When trying to establish objective morality, one might object that “God did many evil acts” in the Old Testament. How do you handle this situation?
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A Groaning World Evil, Pain, and Suffering
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Understanding the Issue This topic requires patience and empathy ▫Often backed by personal experience ▫Often emotionally charged Sometimes arguments aren’t the answer ▫Intellectual vs. Emotional Logical vs. Evidential ▫Know your audience!
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Two Arguments in One Evil ▫The evidence of evil in the world shows that there can’t possibly be a good, loving God Suffering ▫The reality of everyday pain and suffering of innocent people shows there can’t be a good, loving God Both try to attack the existence of God
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The Intellectual Problem Arguments against God from suffering/evil ▫Remember burden of proof ▫They make the claim, they must back it up with arguments or evidence ▫We provide answers Ask—impossible or improbable? ▫Logical or evidential
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Logical Version “God and suffering cannot coexist”’ ▫An all-loving, all-powerful God cannot exist in a world where suffering exists—No obvious, explicit contradiction Two implicit premises ▫If God is all-powerful, He can make any world he wants ▫If God is all-loving, He prefers a world without suffering
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Premise 1 “If God is all-powerful, He can create any world that He wants” ▫One problem—free will (logically impossible) ▫Must only be possible to disprove Premise 1 There are many worlds that God cannot create ▫Any world that violates the free will he has given us
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Premise 2 “If God is all-loving, He prefers a world without suffering” ▫Is suffering sometimes necessary for a greater good? (Ex. Dentist) ▫Must only be possible to disprove Premise 2 This requires insight into God’s mind Premise 1 and Premise 2 are too great a burden
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Evidential Version “It’s improbable that God could have good reasons for permitting suffering” ▫No longer absolute—inductive instead of deductive (lighter burden of proof) Three responses ▫The human position ▫The full scope of evidence ▫Suffering makes sense under Christianity
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Human Limitations We are in no position to say whether God has no good reason for permitting suffering in the world ▫Often we can’t see the point of suffering ▫We don’t have the scope to make this bold claim Two illustrations ▫Chaos theory (butterfly effect) ▫Complexity of our decisions and consequences
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The Full Scope of Evidence God’s existence is likely when all the evidence is considered together ▫“Improbable” relative to what? ▫Remember cosmological, design, moral arguments The existence of evil can be used to prove God ▫Evil exists moral argument God exists ▫Without God, suffering and evil aren’t a problem
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Suffering—The Christian Perspective Christianity actually expects the coexistence of God and suffering ▫The purpose of life is not happiness or comfort ▫Suffering is a natural consequence of sin ▫God’s purpose extends beyond the physical life ▫Knowledge of God outweighs all suffering Suffering makes sense under the Christian God
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Question 1 When dealing with the problem of evil, pain, and suffering in the world, do you believe that the objections from most people are emotional or intellectual? Why?
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Question 2 When talking about the objection against the existence of God due to evil, pain, and suffering, why is it important to remember who bears the burden of proof?
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Question 3 If you began discussing the problem of evil, pain, and suffering with someone and you determined that their problem with God was emotional, not intellectual, what would you do?
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