Darth J wrote:
Hey, I was wondering something. Say you have a rape victim. Elohim has to allow this suffering to happen because he can't interfere with free will. But why does Elohim prefer the free will of the rapist over the free will of the victim? By failing to intervene and/or setting up the world such that this victim gets raped, isn't he interfering with the victim's free will to not get raped? When Elohim allows this to happen, he allows the rapist the free will to hurt someone, but deprives the victim of the free will not to be hurt.
Oh, but sometimes Elohim intervenes and prevents or rescues someone from the rape, right? So is Elohim arbitrary, or are there some of his beloved children who just need to get raped for their souls to grow? The latter necessarily means that Elohim in fact wants some of his children to be raped for their own good. And since Jesus commanded us to be perfect like our Heavenly Father is perfect, I should allow my own children to get hurt so that they will grow, right?
You could've turned up this criticism to 11. Let's quote a much younger EA doing just that:
Suppose I assert that I'm a morally perfect being. You invite me over to your house. The second I open up the door I shout "Now Suffer. Muwhahahaha!" As if by magic, you fall to the ground in unimaginable agony.
As you are writhing in pain, you can think that it is logically possible that a demon or Satan might be obscuring your sense of reality, but would you? Should you? Or, if you like, you could argue that my purposes, in my infinite moral wisdom, are simply beyond your ken. However, it would seem to me that your belief in my morality should be tied to its correspondence with your observations of reality. Granted we understand your belief is only provisional to your observations, but given what is known, I think it is fair to say this provides solid evidence against EA the morally perfect being existing.
Plus, simply resorting to radical skepticism in our ability to discern if our observations of reality and moral ideas are consistent with claims about a God should leave the Christian shrugging his shoulders when it comes to making any moral judgment.
Either we have access to the moral principles to judge benevolence (moral goodness) or we don't. If we do, then we can judge God's actions based on whether they are in accordance with the principles of morality. You can say that God isn't subject to the principles of morality, or that she is subject to some moral principles, but those are beyond our understanding. God has more moral depth than we can know. But what you have done then is reduced the claim "God is good" down to gibberish. What does it mean to say that God follows morality that is in principle unknowable to us when its clear she violates what is known to us? Saying God does the right thing, but we don't know what the right thing is no different practically than saying whatever God does is good because God does it. If we are going to say "God is benevolent" that statement is going to have to generate some expectations for us if it is to be meaningful at all.
So if you want to say a god exists with certain properties, God's ways must be knowable to us, at least to some extent. We must be able to say, for example, that it's generally wrong to allow a person who's dying anyway to suffer horribly if one can prevent it with no risk or effort, and that therefore if God does so routinely, in almost every case where she could have prevented it, she has almost certainly acted wrongly in some of those cases, unless we have good reason to think not preventing it served some greater good. If not, what exactly do we know about morality then? Why the special pleading to make God-theory inductively unique compared to other theories, like EA-theory? Similarly, if it seems transparently clear, according to our human notions of justice, that it is unjust to punish someone infinitely for a finite offense, especially under circumstances where it cannot serve to rehabilitate the offender, where his punishment cannot possibly serve as an example or deterrent to others, and where he cannot possibly have made an informed choice, we must be able to say that it really is unjust, or else admit that we have no idea what justice means when speaking about God.
You have to be able to show that the way God operates is at least plausibly the way we might expect an omnipotent, omniscient, omnibenevolent being to operate. You can't deflect objections of this sort by simply observing we don't know how God would do things, a.k.a. the ways of God are mysterious. If God-theory cannot inform our expectations of how reality is supposed to look like, then you've reduced God to a shot in the dark.
A Christian must argue that God would in fact do things one way rather than another in some cases because his religion entails that's what he did. Thus, it's no good to say merely that we don't know for sure that God would not commit massive genocide, you must argue that this is just the sort of thing that an omnipotent, omniscient, omnibenevolent God would do. And since God is the ultimate good, anytime you breath a moral motivation into God, you are making a case to breath that moral motivation into yourself.
There are points in a faith that present moral difficulties for the believer. A variety of responses are often offered to help resolve these difficulties. Yet, I wonder if they always fully connect with the idea of God as a moral example we should follow.
For example, in response to the problem of God allowing moral evil, a typical response is to note that God desires us to have free will. While this response is problematic, the easiest route is to ignore it and move onto evils not caused by agents. However, what we can take from this response is that God, in his hierarchy of values, thinks its more important for a murderer to be able to exercise his desire to kill someone than a victim to have their negative desire not to be killed protected. The positive will to act is more important than the negative will not to be acted upon. (Notice in both cases the good is conveniently defined by what allows for Gods non-action.)
Yet it runs deeper than this. Our desires are not all within our range to act upon. Our will is naturally limited. For instance, after reading one of Pents posts, you might want to make him spontaneously combust. Sadly, this isn't within the abilities we are allowed to have. We can desire to act in some way without having the ability to do so. So, there is only a specific set of options we can act on, chosen by God. God is the author of those possiblities. This means, not only is our free will to act upon our murderous desires allowed within certain limitations, it is specifically allowed. It was selected to be in the actionable range, along with our potential inclination for it.
To take a second example, if a little girl walks off a pier and drowns, some wonder why a benevolent God would allow this to happen. One response is to say God does not wish to interfere with free will. God, if he were to stop this in all cases, would harm our range of choices, which is undesirable. The loss of choice to walk off piers and die is worse than the temporary but terrible suffering caused by this happening. Now God couldve designed the world or little girls in such a way that theyd never walk of piers and never consider it within their actionable range, or it wouldn't result in as much pre-death suffering, but he didn't. God wants that option to exist. Not only that, but God values a little girls free will to walk off a pier and drown more highly than protecting her fragile life.
Again, we do not share the ethics of this stand-alone free will defense. When we see a girl about to walk off a pier, we attempt to stop her. If we were to become more like this FWD God, it would be our duty to let the girl walk off and die, thus favoring the greater moral good of preserving her free will. You might say perhaps God seeks us to be the ones to stop little girls from falling off piers. It is our act to prevent this from happening that is the greater good. First, it's not clear why the oppurtunity to prevent suffering allows for more good than no potential suffering at all. We didn't rejoice the advent of the AIDS epidemic because of the greater moral good of having the chance to cure it. However, if this were the case, then girls would rarely if ever manage to fall off piers and drown. Wed stop them, and in instances where God knows we could not stop them, hed do it. He could even mask it in such a way so as to appear to be a "normal" person doing it. Near drownings might be common, but drownings would be more rare to nonexistent. (You don't need to see what happens in the event of drowning to have knowledge of what will. Not only that, but the distribution of this sort of suffering is not evenly placed in a way that suggests it acting as a uniform example.) What this means, if you find this situation undesirable, is more is needed to explaining Gods moral system perhaps soul-making theodicy, perhaps something else. However, the fact that breathing the same moral motivation into you fails should be a sign that it is inadequate for apologizing for Gods non-action as well. Its a test of what is satisfactory in a response if you are to be consistent. Referencing unknown purposes, in this case, will not do.
Unknown purposes are incompatible with explanation. It demonstrates the fundamental incapability of the offered defenses to answer the problem. (Why would you need to inovke unknown reasons if the known ones were satisfactory?) It renders them incomplete at best, outright false at worst. But heres the key. If you have to invoke the unknown purposes to defend God, you are saying you don't know how to make a judgment about how God would do things. He truly is beyond your ken.
Pause for a moment. Think about this, as I return to my previous theme. You need to know how God goes about doing things, at least to some extent, to know that he does some things in one way, such as not lying, rather than another, such as lying. Any defense arguing we don't understand Gods purposes also deflects any positive claim that we do. God might lie to you for the greater good, because the greater good is something you fundamentally just don't understand. The believer better hope they understand how God does things and why they are moral, because otherwise, they scarcely know how to act moral, with respect to their theistic belief. You are no better off thinking God will send you to hell for disbelief or belief in him (See Eaism). How can you know, if Gods purposes are so inscrutable? There's no way to tell without an external marker of what benevolence is along with experience allowing us to say God has that property. If reality itself is so untrustworthy, that you have to invoke global skepticism by pretending entities unknown to you are obscuring your sense of it when it does not conform to your religious expectations, then what you really have done is taken off your ability to reason with your experience to come to any conclusion, but the one that favors your religious belief.