Not a Supernatural Boy Scout.The Reality of God and the Problem of Evil Brian Davies Brian Davies can stand for:
Continuum, $24.95, 224 pp. Brian Davies has written an excellent volume on God and evil. The book is remarkable in a number of ways, including its brevity (given the subject matter), its clarity, and its depth (given its brevity and clarity). Davies, a Dominican friar and professor of philosophy at Fordham University Fordham University (fôr`dəm), in New York City; Jesuit; coeducational; founded as St. John's College 1841, chartered as a university 1846; renamed 1907. Fordham College for men and Thomas More College for women merged in 1974. , has already produced one of the best introductory works on the thought of Thomas Aquinas. Now he takes his considerable intellectual skills to a cluster of perennial questions about the implications of evil for belief in God. Some philosophical confusion regarding the significance of evil can be avoided by carefully adopting Aquinas's philosophical theology Philosophical theology is the disciplined employment of philosophical methods in developing or analyzing theological concepts. It therefore includes natural theology as well as philosophical treatments of orthodox and heterodox theology. . Consider the case of antitheists who argue that claims about the existence of a theistic the·ism n. Belief in the existence of a god or gods, especially belief in a personal God as creator and ruler of the world. the God lead people to expect that the world would not be marked by evil. Since there is evil, the conclusion runs, then such a God cannot exist. Davies responds by arguing that because God alone necessarily exists, and everything else that exists does so only because God has chosen to create this kind of universe and not another, there is no purely logical (as distinct from scientific) basis for saying that we should expect the universe to be structured in one way rather than another. We are not in a position to claim, as some antitheists do, that if God exists, we should expect the world to be lacking in evil. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Davies, since "we have no means of determining what logically possible things God will make to be ... we have to start by noting what God has, in fact, made to be." Davies also addresses theological positions that reject divine "impassiblity" and prefer to speak of divine suffering as more faithful to the notion of divine love. Jurgen Moltmann and Jon Sobrino Jon Sobrino, S.J. (born 27 December 1938, Barcelona, Spain) is a Jesuit Catholic priest and theologian, known mostly for his contributions to liberation theology. He received worldwide attention in 2007 when the Vatican's Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith issued a maintain that divine compassion suffers with victims, but Davies holds to the Thomistic claim that God as the uncaused cause cannot himself be caused to change and so cannot be said to suffer. God brings about change in the world but is not changed by the world. Davies holds that talk of divine suffering makes God sound too much like a human being, but Davies denies that his own view makes God an indifferent observer of human misery. God is profoundly present to sufferers, as God is present in everything that exists, and divine love is expressed in its benevolent effects on the world. What does this imply about God's goodness? Many discussions of divine goodness lead to frustration because they presume that God is something like a supernatural Boy Scout, brimming with good will and always ready to lend a hand to give assistance. to give assistance; to help. See also: Hand Lend . This view sets us up for disappointment when things don't go well. Davies argues provocatively and, I think, correctly that this perspective wrongly construes God as a moral agent. God's goodness, Davies insists, has nothing to do with the human idea of "good behavior Orderly and lawful action; conduct that is deemed proper for a peaceful and law-abiding individual. The definition of good behavior depends upon how the phrase is used. ." The very notion of a divine creator implies that God is not subject to moral formation: he does not develop virtues or moral "character." Davies argues that since what we mean by "moral goodness" cannot be attributed to God, it makes no sense to conclude that evil counterindicates the existence of God. This is not to deny that God is just, merciful mer·ci·ful adj. Full of mercy; compassionate: sought merciful treatment for the captives. See Synonyms at humane. mer , and good in the theologically and philosophically appropriate senses of these terms; it is simply to remind us that our understanding of God's goodness is always analogical an·a·log·i·cal adj. Of, expressing, composed of, or based on an analogy: the analogical use of a metaphor. an . According to Davies, God causes goodness but not evil. Theists often engage in a project of "exonerating" God from responsibility for evil by means of the "free-will defense": Human beings freely decide to do wrong; God cannot be blamed, the argument runs, for God does not cause the actions of wicked people. Davies objects that this position implies that God is merely extrinsic EVIDENCE, EXTRINSIC. External evidence, or that which is not contained in the body of an agreement, contract, and the like. 2. It is a general rule that extrinsic evidence cannot be admitted to contradict, explain, vary or change the terms of a contract or of a to human agents. God is the cause of the acts of wicked people in the sense that God is the cause of all that happens in the universe. This is not to deny that we are responsible to make decisions on the basis of good reasons, but only to note that human freedom acts within and not outside the divine causality causality, in philosophy, the relationship between cause and effect. A distinction is often made between a cause that produces something new (e.g., a moth from a caterpillar) and one that produces a change in an existing substance (e.g. that orders creation. God empowers our choices even when they run directly contrary to his will and our own good. Of course, evil is found not only in human suffering but also in the pain, waste, and death of the natural world. Darwin famously lost faith in a benevolent and provident creator because of natural evil. Davies places natural evil, or "evil suffered," in a wide cosmological context. What harms one organism (say, a worm) enhances another (the fish who eats it); today's predators are tomorrow's prey. The evil suffered in the natural world, Davies argues, is ultimately due to the goodness constantly produced and sustained by the Creator: "My claim is that when it comes to evil suffered all we have is the creative activity of God bringing about what is good--that God brings about everything that is good and does not directly bring about anything that we might think of as evil suffered." Davies's point is that God does not creatively produce evil, which is a kind of negative by-product by·prod·uct or by-prod·uct n. 1. Something produced in the making of something else. 2. A secondary result; a side effect. by-product Noun 1. of an essentially good creation. The "evil done" voluntarily by human beings adds to and aggravates the "evil suffered," but God is not morally accountable for evil done; we are. Those who recognize that we are empowered by God to act as responsible agents ought to have a keen sense of our responsibility to "do good and avoid evil." The struggle against evil should take place in the context of gratitude for God's goodness. Davies has written an excellent book that everyone can benefit from reading. It can be used in undergraduate courses and parish study groups, but scholars will also profit from the author's carefully wrought arguments and nuanced conclusions. The Reality of God and the Problem of Evil provides another indication that Thomism continues to thrive as a vital tradition in philosophy and theology. Stephen Pope Stephen Pope (born January 25, 1983) is an English cricketer. He is a right-handed batsman and a wicket-keeper. He has played List A cricket since 1999 and played Twenty20 cricket during the 2003 season, helping Gloucestershire to the semi-finals. is a professor of theology at Boston College Boston College, main campus at Chestnut Hill, Mass.; coeducational; Jesuit; est. and opened 1863. Actually a university, the school's Chestnut Hill campus comprises colleges of arts and sciences and business administration, the graduate school, and schools of nursing . |
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