Man has long asked how a loving God could allow evil to exist in the
world. It’s an age-old philosophical question that can cause those who
want faith to doubt and those who want to doubt to mock faith.
A Christian’s answer to this question is “free will,” a concept
critics may regard as something reduced to a convenient cliché.The
truth is, though, that this is a most fascinating subject to
inquisitive minds.
The two qualities that make us like God are intellect and free will,
despite the fact that the former can seem as lacking as the latter is
abused. Why intellect has prerequisite status is obvious, but why free
will? If God is omnipotent, He can prevent the immeasurable pain and
suffering we inflict on one another with the blink of an eternal eye.
Why doesn’t He do it? Perhaps this problem is what caused people such
as Thomas Jefferson to embrace deism, the belief that God set the
Universe in motion but then receded into the background, indifferent to
our plight. So let’s examine free will.
Imagine you have a child, and technology has advanced to a point where
you can implant a computer chip in his brain, one that would ensure he
never acted wrongly. If everyone were thus controlled, we would have a
world in which everyday transgressions were unknown. Yet, would you
view this as an acceptable remedy for your child’s human frailty?
A good father certainly would not, for it would render the child
something less than human. He would then be nothing more than an
organic robot, an automaton, controlled by an outside agency whose will
has supplanted his own. Just picture the Borg in Star Trek.
After all, what of love? While a child thus controlled would behave in
ways that may seem loving in a superficial sense, he would not be
acting out of love at all. We only exhibit love when we could be
hateful, but choose to be loving instead.
As to this, think about how much more we appreciate aid rendered
voluntarily than that which is coerced. When starving, we may
certainly be happy to receive a meal from a man who has a gun to his
head, but it sates our soul as well as stomach when he helps us with a
happy heart and of his own accord. Likewise, it’s considered a
mitigating circumstance when a person is coerced into committing a
crime. (Note: these examples involve incomplete consent of the will
due to duress, not the elimination of free will, as my computer-chip
hypothetical does.) Or, think about dolphins trained by the military
to detect mines in the ocean, attack enemy divers or plant explosives
on ships. While we certainly may appreciate what these animals can do,
it cannot be compared to the conscious decision made when a man accepts
the risk to life and limb on a bomb squad; the dolphin acts in
accordance with his training – or programming, as it were – whereas the
man has made a decision to risk his life with full knowledge and
consent of the will. Intellect and free will are what separate us from
the animal kingdom.
Getting back to our hypothetical child, a good parent wants him to be
more than just controlled. Sure, when he is young, he may be watched
continually and his life micromanaged, owing to his immature state. As
he grows, however, we can loosen the reins commensurate with his
increasing capacity to govern himself from within. And we look forward
to the day when he will exercise his free will rightly, for only then
will he have come to full flower as a human being.
If we fail in this task of moral formation and the child goes astray,
he may end up in prison, a place where his ability to exercise his free
will is limited. From a moral standpoint, we then may consider him to
be a malformed human being. Were he to not have free will in the first
place, however, he would be something less than a human being.
Then, when saying that we cannot believe in God because of the
existence of evil, we accept a contradiction. If God doesn’t exist,
how can we label a position evil with credibility? If man is the
author of what we call right and wrong, if morality is all a matter of
opinion, then there is no evil in any real sense. In other words, if
we are judging some things to be good and others evil, we have to ask
what standard we’re using as a yardstick. If the standard is simply
consensus opinion, then what we call morality falls in the realm of
taste. And if 90 percent of the world liked chocolate ice cream and
disliked vanilla, we wouldn’t think this rendered chocolate good and
vanilla evil; it’s simply a preference. So, should we think murder was
evil simply because 90 percent of the people said they didn’t like it?
If there is nothing outside of man and his emotions that deems it so –
if it is not objective reality – then it also is simply a matter of
taste.
“Oh, but it involves death, not dessert. C’mon, it’s morality!” say
the critics? Sure, your feelings may tell you this distinction is
significant, but if it doesn’t accord with external reality, those
feelings are in error. They are then simply biases, ones powerful
enough to evoke passion, but biases nonetheless. And those very
different terms, taste and morality, would be nothing but semantics.
So, for “good” and “evil” to truly be reckoned as such, the standard we
use cannot merely be taste masquerading as “values.” And since man is
being judged (we are, after all, talking about our actions), he cannot
be the standard, for a standard cannot judge itself any more than a
board can be used to measure itself for a carpentry project. For a
standard to judge what is good and evil, it must be both outside and
above them, in which case that standard starts to sound an awful lot
like God.
So it’s ironic: Some find the existence of evil to be convincing proof
God doesn’t exist, but the Truth is that the existence of evil would
prove God does exist.
When we look around us at man’s inhumanity to man, it may seem a high
price to pay for free will. Yet, when pondering how much we value
freedom and have often sacrificed for it, the matter is illuminated.
Our founding fathers and many others were willing to shed blood, both
theirs and others, and risk wealth, land and status for that cherished
value. If in our finer moments we are willing to endure hardship and
misery so that we will not be puppets of the worldly, it should
surprise us not that He who has only fine moments would allow us to
endure same so that we would not be puppets of the divine. The
difference is that what man offers his brother only when there is a
full flowering of the human spirit, He grants without reservation so
that the spirit may be truly human.



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