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HOLY SPIRIT

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We are left with Despair. 'Things are not going very well. ... Thus, this antitheodicy must reckon with despair.' EE, 11,12 ' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: HOLY SPIRIT


1
THE PROBLEM OF PAIN
The Scream, E. Munch, http//www.ibiblio.org/wm/pa
int/auth/munch/
2
THEODICIES-John K. RothGod is Great,God is
Good . . . Perhaps
3
THEODICIES Roth
  • A Theodicy of Protest, Encountering Evil, 2-20
  • I protest against philosophies and theologies
    that do not take the historical particularity of
    evil seriously enough, even when they claim that
    evils are horrendous. EE, 3
  • The Holocaust, genocide, and democide smash and
    destroy particular persons in ways that scar the
    world forever. EE, 3

4
THEODICIES Roth
  • In my present thinking, I consider theodicy of
    protest and antitheodicy as nearly synonymous.
    EE, 4
  • That confrontation is rooted not so much in
    rejection of God but rather in recognition that
    such defiance is crucial in struggles against
    despair. Jewish insight, ancient and
    contemporary, calls for men and women-
    particularly Christians- to consider a theodicy
    of protest, which is a form of antitheodicy. EE,
    4

5
THEODICIES Roth
  • My theodicy of protest begins by probing that
    assumption i.e., that God cares about history
    and it does so by agreeing with Hegel history is
    the slaughter-bench at which the happiness of
    peoples, the wisdom of states, and the virtue of
    individuals have been sacrificed. EE, 6-7

6
THEODICIES Roth
  • One way to summarize those questions is to ask
    if creation is good, and yet history is largely a
    slaughter-bench, how cost effective are Gods
    decisions? Theodicy must deal with
    God-as-economist, and the question posed above
    deals with Gods waste. EE, 7

7
THEODICIES Roth
  • Roth argues that God has acted either out of
    necessity or freedom.
  • No matter what horn of the dilemma is seized,
    any ways in which God could rationally justify
    Gods economy as purely cost effective in
    pursuing goodness that we can appreciate . . .
    well, those ways are beyond imagining. This
    result testifies that such a wasteful God cannot
    be totally benevolent. History itself is Gods
    indictment. EE, 7

8
THEODICIES Roth
  • Do the ends justify the means?
  • Already the cost-effectiveness of Gods creative
    acts has been challenged. In that challenge a
    critique of the gift of human freedom was
    implied. To make the critique explicit, the
    nature of human freedom must be focused. In a
    word, our freedom is both too much and too
    little. It is far more an occasion for waste than
    a defense of Gods total goodness can reconcile.
    EE, 9

9
THEODICIES Roth
  • Freedom (human) is often used to explain evil and
    pain. However
  • We have more power and freedom than is good for
    us. Perhaps in some past Eden all the factors of
    freedom were in healthy equilibrium. In present
    history, however, that dream is a myth at best.
    EE, 9

10
THEODICIES Roth
  • Does God do the best God can?
  • Christians claim that God raised Jesus from the
    dead. If God did so, then God plausibly had the
    might to thwart the Holocaust long before it
    ended. . . . But that fact, in turn, leaves us to
    ask Why should anybody bother with a God like
    this one, who seems so infrequently to do the
    best that is within Gods power. EE, 11

11
THEODICIES Roth
  • We are left with Despair.
  • Things are not going very well. A protesting
    theodicy does not say that Gods love controls
    the universe, nor does it hold that claims which
    find this world to be the best one possible make
    good sense. Thus, this antitheodicy must reckon
    with despair. EE, 11,12
  • Put another way no matter what happens, God is
    going to be much less than perfectly justified.
    EE, 12

12
THEODICIES Roth
  • Roth complains about Gods non-intervention in
    the world.
  • If God is sovereign, bound only by Gods will,
    then apparently God chooses to be the creator and
    master of this universe. Although God could
    intervene dramatically at any point in present
    history, God elects to let freedom work out its
    own course as it lives in individuals and
    communities. Thus, Gods plan for history is
    virtually no plan at all. EE, 13

13
THEODICIES Roth
  • For Roth, God is without excuse.
  • Still, the fact remains the net result of Gods
    choices is that the world is more wild and
    wasteful than any good reason that we can imagine
    would require it to be. Thus to be for such a God
    requires some sense of being against God as
    well. EE, 12

14
CRITIQUE OFJohn T. Roth
15
THE PROBLEM OF PAIN
The Scream, E. Munch, http//www.ibiblio.org/wm/pa
int/auth/munch/
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