I don't think that is a commonly accepted idea. I've certainly never heard it suggested at church, where the message is that, for example, the prayers of the faithful avail much, and people can be healed through their own faith and the faith of others. I'm pretty confident that Mormonism teaches about a god who does intervene to control outcomes, ranging from doing well on an exam to finding lost keys. Another piece of evidence for this view is the Prayer Roll in the temples. So Mormon god is both interventionist and persuadable.Limnor wrote: ↑Tue Feb 10, 2026 3:13 amIf God never intervened and was never present, then yes—faith would be pointless. But Paul and Kierkegaard—and more importantly Jesus—describe the concept, and act, differently. The idea is that God doesn’t intervene to control outcomes, but is present within suffering.
So I'm ignoring Paul, Kierkegaard, and Jesus for the moment, and trying to look only at the logic of a potential interventionist god.
Let's put the two ideas together, but not as hypotheticals:
- God intervene to stop every evil. As a result, faith doesn’t go away because the problem is solved, it just isn’t necessary in the first place.
- God never intervenes to stop any evil. As a result, faith wouldn’t go away because the problem was solved, it just isn’t necessary as there is nothing to have faith in.
- God intervenes on some occasions to stop some evil. Faith is needed to recognise or account for his occasional intervention.
Do these three statements properly represent the two hypotheticals?
Do these three statements form an exhaustive and mutually exclusive set?
For the sake of argument, let's say that a benevolent interventionist god does exist, and that has two believers, "A", and "B". Could there be an occasion when "A" claims that their god did intervene to stop some evil, (has faith that the god did intervene), but "B" does not think that their god intervened in this case, though accepts that the god has intervened in other cases? That is, "B" puts the good outcome down to chance.
An ambivalent "C" discusses the incident with "A" and "B". How can either of them persuade "C" to believe them? Of what value is the belief of "A" and "B" in their common god? Of what value is "A"'s faith in, or "B"'s doubt about, the disputed intervention?
For a different potential intervention, "A" wants result "X", and "B" wants result "Y", which is incompatible with "X". Each prays for the result they want. So this adds the concept of a persuadable god.
"X" occurs, and "A" happily has faith that their god brought it about. "B" believes, once again, that their god did not intervene, and "X" happened by chance. Which of them should "C" believe, and why? Is there reason for "C" to believe that the god favoured "A"'s request over that of "B"?