Title: 1. Theodicy
11. Theodicy Suffering
- Someone must have traduced Joseph K., for
without having done anything wrong he was
arrested on fine morning - Franz Kafka, The Trial
2(No Transcript)
3TWO APPROACHES TO SUFFERING IN CHRISTIAN
TRADITIONS AND CULTURES
- CHRISTIAN MASOCHISM CHRISTIAN APATHY
41. Christian Masochism
- 1.1 John Calvin's Prayer
- And surely, O Lord, from the very chastisements
which thou has inflicted upon us, we know that
for the justest causes thy wrath is kindled
against us for, seeing thou are a just Judge,
thou afflictest not thy people when not
offending. Therefore, beaten with thy stripes, we
acknowledge that we have provoked thy anger
against us and even now we see thy hand
stretched forth for our punishment. The swords
which thou art wont to use in inflicting
vengeance are now drawn, and those with which
thou threatenest sinners and wicked men we see
ready to smite. But though thou mightest take
much severer punishment upon us than before, and
thus inflict blows an hundredfold more numerous,
and though disasters only less dreadful than
those with which thou didst formerly chastise the
sins of thy people of Israel, should overtake us,
we confess that we are worthy of them, and have
merited them by our crimes.
51. Christian Masochism
- 1.2 Powerlessness and Meaninglessness of
Suffering in Christian Masochism - 1.2.1 "Powerlessness signifies 'the expectancy or
probability held by the individual that his own
behavior cannot determine the occurrence of the
outcomes, or reinforcements, he seeks.'" Soelle,
Suffering, 11
61. Christian Masochism
- 1.2.2 "The consciousness that one is powerless is
a fundamental element in suffering." Soelle,
Suffering, 11 - 1.2.3 "Meaninglessness.... This occurs when 'the
individual is unclear as to what he ought to
believe - when the individuals minimal standards
for clarity in decision making are not met.'"
Soelle, Suffering, 11
71. Christian Masochism
- 1.3 "The reaction to the real or imagined creator
of suffering is pictured in the OT itself as
wrath, ill temper. Suffering produces fruits like
curses, imprecations, and prayers for vengeance
more readily than reform and insight. Suffering
causes people to experience helplessness and
fear indeed intense pain cripples all power to
resist and frequently leads to despair." Soelle,
Suffering, 21
81. Christian Masochism
- 1.4 "It is not difficult to criticize Christian
masochism, since it has so many features that
merit criticism the low value it places on human
strength its veneration of one who is neither
good nor logical but only extremely powerful its
viewing of suffering exclusively form the
perspective of endurance and its consequent lack
of sensitivity for the suffering of others."
Soelle, Suffering, 22
91. Christian Masochism
- 1.5 "The logic of this sadistic understanding of
suffering is hard to refute. It consists of three
propositions which recur in all sadistic
theologies 1) God is the almighty ruler of the
world, and he sends all suffering 2) God acts
justly, not capriciously and 3) all suffering is
punishment for sin." Soelle, Suffering, 24
101. Christian Masochism
- 1.6 "In the face of suffering you are either with
the victim or the executioner - there is no other
option. Therefore that explanation of suffering
that looks away from the victim and identifies
itself with a righteousness that is suppose to
stand behind the suffering has already taken a
step in the direction of theological sadism,
which wants to understand God as the torturer."
Soelle, Suffering, 32
111. Christian Masochism
- 1.7 "When Christians try to explain all suffering
in and of itself having theological significance
we end up vacating the cross of its significance
because we fail to remember that what is
important about the cross is who was crucified
there. Moreover such accounts of suffering tempt
us to masochistic accounts of the Christian life
that cannot help belie the joy characteristic of
the Christian orientation." Hauerwas, Suffering
Presence, 32 I Peter 3.14-18
122. Christian Apathy
- 2.1 "The ideal of a life free from suffering, the
illusion of painlessness, destroys people's
ability to feel anything.... The more people
anticipate the elimination of suffering the less
strength they have actually to oppose it."
Soelle, Suffering, 4
132. Christian Apathy
- 2.2 "Apatheia is a Greek word that literally
means non-suffering, freedom from suffering, a
creature's inability to suffer.... Apathy is a
form of the inability to suffer. It is understood
as a social condition which people are so
dominated by the goal of avoiding suffering that
it becomes a goal to avoid human relationships
and contacts altogether. In so far as the
experiences of suffering, the pathai (Greek for
the things that happen to a person, misfortunes)
of life are repressed, there is a corresponding
disappearance of passion for life and of strength
and intensity of its joys." Soelle, Suffering,
36
142. Christian Apathy
- 2.3 "Without question there are tangible
sociological causes for growing apathy. There is,
first of all, the abolition of shortage of
absolutely essential commodities. Hunger and cold
as elementary forms of deprivation have
disappeared from the industrial nations needs
are satisfied. This private prosperity obscures
public poverty and thus helps to cover human
suffering. Apathy flourishes in the consciousness
of the satiated. Increasing enlightenment and
education are other reasons that some suffering
has already been eliminated or become capable of
elimination. Greater mobility and increased
separation from primary relationships also change
the relationship to suffering." Soelle,
Suffering, 40
152. Christian Apathy
- 2.4 ". . . it could be that a much more
appropriate reproach today would concern apathy,
that 'Christianity has become a stranger to
pain.'" Soelle, Suffering, 41
162. Christian Apathy
- 2.5 "...it is useful to reflect on our reaction
to someone suffering suffering makes the other a
stranger and our first reaction is to be
repelled. Suffering makes people's otherness
stand out in strong relief, but that otherness is
exactly the condition necessary to force
recognition of them and of ourselves. For
example, I suspect that one of the problems with
suffering is that it alienates us from ourselves
- 'this thing is happening to me is not me.' But
it is exactly the ability to make the suffering
mine that is crucial if I am to be an integral
self." Hauerwas, Suffering Presence, 25
172. Christian Apathy
- 2.6 "When a being who is free from suffering is
worshiped as God, then it is possible to train
oneself in patience, endurance, imperturbability,
and aloofness from suffering. The more a person
draws himself back, the smaller he makes himself,
the greater are his chances of remaining free
from suffering!" Soelle, Suffering, 43
182. Christian Apathy
- 2.7 Kitamori's Theology "He sees God as one who
suffers because of sin and yet cannot maintain
his wrath, who reconciles wrath and love in pain
because he loves the object of his wrath, which
always entails 'suffering.' Kitamori criticizes
the blindness to pain that prevails in theology
and sketches a picture of discipleship in which
people 'serve the pain of God by their own
pain.'" Soelle, Suffering, 43-44
192. Christian Apathy
- 2.8 "To 'serve the pain of God by your own pain'
is to lead suffering out of its private little
corner and to achieve human solidarity.
Everyone's natural reflex is flight from
suffering but even when it succeeds it is at the
same time the perpetuation of universal
suffering." Soelle, Suffering, 45
20(No Transcript)
21DEFINITIONS OF SUFFERING
221. Stanley Hauerwas
- 1.1 "Boeyink is on the right track when he
suggests that we 'ordinarily mean by suffering an
anguish which we experience, not only as a
pressure to change, but at a threat to our
composure, our integrity, and the fulfillment of
our intention.'" Suffering Presence, an essay
called "Reflections on Suffering, Death, and
Medicine", 27
231. Stanley Hauerwas
- 1.2 "Suffering has as its root sense the idea of
submitting or being forced to submit to and
endure some particular set of circumstances."
Hauerwas, Suffering Presence, 28 - 1.3 "Suffering should not be sought, but it ought
to be accepted, at least in certain forms."
Hauerwas, Suffering Presence, 26
241. Stanley Hauerwas
- 1.4 "Suffering is not morally significant only
because things happen to us that we cannot avoid,
but because the demands of morality cannot be
satisfied without asking the self to submit to
limits imposed by morality itself. In this sense,
without allowing ourselves and others to suffer
we could not be human or humane." Hauerwas,
Suffering Presence, 25
252. Simone Weil
- 2.1 "There is not real affliction unless the
event that has seized and uprooted a life attacks
it, directly or indirectly, in all its parts,
social, psychological, and physical. The social
factor is essential. There is not really
affliction unless there is social degradation or
the fear of it in some form or another." Weil,
Simone, Waiting For God, 119
262. Simone Weil
- 2.2 "Affliction is an uprooting of life, a more
or less attenuated equivalent of death, made
irresistibly present to the soul by the attack or
immediate apprehension of physical pain. If there
is complete absence of physical pain there is no
affliction for the soul, because our thoughts can
turn to any object." Weil, Simone, Waiting For
God, 118
27Suffering Theodicy
281. Definitions
- 1.1 Theodicy "...is derived from the two Greek
words meaning 'deity' and 'justice' and refers to
the attempts to justify the goodness of God in
the face of the manifold evil present in the
world" Van A. Harvey, A Handbook of Theological
Terms, 236 - 1.2 The center of the dilemma 'either God is
able to prevent evil and will not, or he is
willing to prevent it and cannot.' The situation
is compounded by the Christian affirmation that
Creation is good and that the 'evil' event of the
crucifixion reveals God.
291. Definitions
- 1.3 Theological evils involve -sin and suffering-
"For according to Christianity the end for which
human beings exist and which defines the telos of
man's nature consists in a relationship to God."
Hick, John, Evil and the God of Love, 16 - 1.4 "Moral evil is evil that we human beings
originate cruel, unjust, vicious, and perverse
thoughts and deeds. Natural evil is the evil that
originates independently of human actions in
disease bacilli, earthquakes, storms, droughts,
tornadoes, etc." Hick, John, Evil and the God of
Love, 16
302. The Two Main Types of Approaches
- 2.1 Augustinian Theodicy Evil as privation of
good stemming from misused freedom. - 2.1.1 Evil is not an entity in its own right but
rather a privation of good. - 2.1.2 Its origin is free-will. Moral and Natural
Evil
312. The Two Main Types of Approaches
- 2.1.3 Metaphysical evil The fact of finitude,
or of limited forms of existence, and the
arbitrariness and imperfections thereof -
'principle of plenitude' - the idea that the most
rich and valuable universe is one exemplifying
every possible kind of existence, lover as well
as higher, ugly as well as beautify, imperfect as
well as perfect.
322. The Two Main Types of Approaches
- 2.1.4 Aesthetic In the sight of God all things,
including even sin and its punishment, combine to
form a wonderful harmony which is not only good
but very good.
332. The Two Main Types of Approaches
- 2.2 Irenaean Theodicy
- 2.2.1 Human beings as originally immature beings
upon whom God could not yet profitably bestow his
highest gifts - Adam and Eve as children Sin
not damnable revolt, but rather as a calling
forth to God's compassion on account of their
weakness and vulnerability. - Â
342. The Two Main Types of Approaches
- 2.2.2 Cognitive freedom in relation to God
safeguarded by God's ambiguous self-revelation -
Spiritual growth teaches good and evil and
therefore accepted gratefully from God's hand.
352. The Two Main Types of Approaches
Augustinian Irenaean
Releases God's responsibility. God is responsible, doing it for good.
Evil as non-being Not philosophical, but rather theological.
God's non-personal relationship to creation - hierarchy, punish. Man created for fellowship with God.
Origin fall of angels/people. Eschatological justification for evil
Centrality of fall Fall not important for Theodicy.
362. The Two Main Types of Approaches
- 3. Parallels
- 3.1 Future Completeness
- 3.2 God's ultimate responsibility for the
existence of evil Aug implicit in freedom /
Ire explicit - 3.3 Logical limitations of divine omnipotence,
but not a real restriction. - 3.4 Devil and Community of evil powers.
- 3.5 Neg. evaluation of the world.
37BIBLICAL VIEW OF SUFFERING
- The OT Response to Evil Suffering
381. Retribution Theology
- 1.1 "Righteousness brings prosperity and
wickedness misfortune in the life" (IBD) - 1.2. Controversy concerning the exact nature of
retribution theology - Â 1.2.1 Koch argues that there is no real doctrine
of retribution, but rather 'fate-producing deed'.
"Each deed is like a seed which produces a sphere
of influence for good or ill and each deed of man
will in the end yield its own fruit (cf. Ps 1
Hos 10.12-13a). Yahweh is not thought to be so
much a judge over this process he is rather the
midwife who brings to completion what the
individual has initiated." Gammie, "Theology of
Retribution in the book of Deut," CBQ, XXXII
(70), p 1
391. Retribution Theology
- 1.2.2 Gammie, himself argues for a range in Deut
a) Impersonal principle operative in society
according to which an evil deed will inevitably
bring guilt upon the wrong doer. b) The faithful
assured that YHWH will operate. c) A personal
Theocentric conception. d) Dissolution of the
idea 8.1-9.6 - 1.2.3 Ps. 89.31-37 as punishment in light of
covenant. Also Deut 28. - 1.3 "The retribution scheme is undergirded by a
world view which believes that a moral order in
the world is the only foundation for a sensible
and tolerable life." Beker, Suffering and Hope,
34
401. Retribution Theology
- 1.3.1 "The notion of retributive justice is an
integral component of a rational and harmonious
view of the world, in which all parts work
together to contribute to an orderly cosmos."
Beker, Suffering and Hope, 34 parallels to
Egyptian "Maat". - 1.3.2 "The notion of retribution is deeply
ingrained in human nature. It seems to be an
integral part of the meaning we give to life -
our innate sense that unless retributive justice
is honored, our world collapses into chaos, and
good and evil deeds are no longer recognized for
what they are. Moreover, our conscience dictates
that our contribution to a world of order rather
than disorder commits us to the principle of
retributive justice." Beker, Suffering and Hope,
36
411. Retribution Theology
- 1.3.3 "The law of retribution represents an
egalitarian principle and enables society to move
away from punishment and suffering as irrational
fate or as demonic possession, toward a standard
of equitable justice and order. And so the
concept of retributive justice is directly
related to our hope for the future suffering is
not an irrational blow of fate, but a deserved
punishment for evil and injustice which calls for
satisfaction. Therefore, retribution preserves
the moral order and guarantees a more stable
future. It imposes with the expectation that its
punishment will lead to repentance or at least to
cessation of evil acts." Beker, Suffering and
Hope, 36
422. When Suffering lacks Meaning
- 2.1 Exemplary Sufferers
- 2.1.1 Abel (Gen 4)
- 2.1.2 Uriah the Hittite (2 Sam 11)
- 2.1.3 Naboth (1 Kgs 21)
- 2.1.4 Job
433. Laments
- 1. Praise in the minor key.
- 2. Extent 6 "confessions" of Jeremiah Book of
Job Lamentations half of the Psalter. - 3. Form in Psalm 80 Communal Lament
- 4. Message of Psalm 88 Individual Lament
444. Ecclesiastes
- 1. Qoheleth seems to doubt not only God's justice
but also his omnipotence. - 2. The Qoheleth approaches the problem of evil
and suffering in a philosophical way,
contemplating the world's reality in an almost
detached way Eccles. 3.16-19.
454. Ecclesiastes
- 3. "There is a fateful cycle in the world
according to the Preacher - a cycle and rhythm of
vanity which in no way reflects the justice of
God. God seems so utterly transcendent and the
world such a spectacle of contradictions in the
matter of justice - a world in which
arbitrariness rules and in which neither justice
nor injustice make any basic difference - that
the best advice for human inquiry and conduct in
the world is to cease exploring ultimate meaning
and to enjoy the good moments in life for what
they offer." Beker, Suffering and Hope, 40
Eccles. 9.1b-5
465. Apocalyptic
- 1. The apocalyptic response to Israel's crisis of
faith refuses to surrender the world as God's
creation and to render the suffering of the
righteous as meaningless. The crisis of faith is
here embraced within a structure of hope.
Although the apocalypticists still often views
suffering as deserved punishment or as a form of
divine testing and instruction, they attribute
suffering basically to the activity of hostile
powers and view it in large measure as undeserved
suffering. And yet suffering is endurable for
apocalypticists, such as Daniel, because they
believe that God will vindicate their undeserved
suffering and will soon achieve a final and
complete triumph over the hostile powers that
thwart God's redemptive purpose for Israel."
Beker, Suffering and Hope, 41
475. Apocalyptic
- 2. Apocalyptic Responses to Suffering and Hope
- 2.1 "A profound deepening of the power and scope
of the evil in the world and its attendant
suffering emerges. The power of evil rules not
only the social fabric but also the
cosmic-heavenly spheres, so that the struggle
between good and evil does not only take place on
earth but also in heaven." Beker, Suffering and
Hope, 42
485. Apocalyptic
- 2.2 "In the face of this deepening awareness of
suffering, the hope in God's ultimate triumph
over evil becomes increasingly transcendent."
Beker, Suffering and Hope, 42
495. Apocalyptic
- 2.3 "Suffering, however, is not just a fate to be
endured, or hope an idyllic, utopian project of
thought. Rather, a theology of martyrdom surfaces
here, the solidarity of the faithful who, in
their commitment to God's faithfulness, endured
the onslaught of evil, and who surrender their
lives to death for the sake of their hope in
God's cause and its ultimate triumph." Beker,
Suffering and Hope, 42