this post was submitted on 01 Jan 2025
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[–] [email protected] 13 points 2 days ago (12 children)

This is sorta the beginners philosophy question. There are plenty of answers, it's not the "gotcha" it appears to be. Those answers unroll into all sorts of branching other conversations but they exist.

Maybe it's because free will exists.

Maybe there's a greater purpose for what we call "evil" that results in more good.

Maybe it's a definitional thing, where "evil" to us is always going to be the most-evil existent thing so if existing evils were gone "evil" would still exist but it would consist of aggressive kitten licks or something. So "evil" can't not exist, but it's not because God can't get rid of what we call "evil" now.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 2 days ago (4 children)

Maybe it's because free will exists.

Then God shouldn't have given it to us, still his fault, OP still applies

Maybe there's a greater purpose for what we call "evil" that results in more good.

Then God should have given us the understanding of it so we're not left to question him, OP still applies

Maybe it's a definitional thing, where "evil" to us is always going to be the most-evil existent thing so if existing evils were gone "evil" would still exist but it would consist of aggressive kitten licks or something. So "evil" can't not exist, but it's not because God can't get rid of what we call "evil" now.

Shitty point, we have a clear definition of what these evils are currently and yet nothing is done about them. Maybe if we somehow lived in a world that no longer had the evils we see today you'd have a point but this is just a silly one

[–] droans 1 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

According to the Bible, God never gave man free will. He only gave us the free will to accept the knowledge of actions. However, it reads more like how you would think of a child as innocent – humans didn't know what was good or bad. Of course, the Garden of Eden was never real and the story was just a story.

However, the Bible also states that the reason we have free will is because love and good aren't forced. You can't love someone or perform a good deed if those are your only options. You have to choose to do so. The angels also had free will which is what led to Lucifer and his followers.

I'm not religious anymore, but my parents are still super Catholic. My dad taught Sunday school growing up and still works for a church while my mom is a teacher at a Catholic high school.

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