Waterfall said:
I enjoyed and appreciated your response,
Thank you. I enjoy the discussion. Theodicy conversations are few and far between.
Waterfall said:
but at the same time, is this not the usual response from the church
When you wander the same path for centuries you tend to see the same things. If all of the things you are observing are living things (flora and fauna) you will note changes over time. Most of those changes will be flora and fauna doing what they do.
What will change little will be the inorganic bits and pieces but only because the change to the rocks along the way is the result of the elements and impact of flora or fauna.
Waterfall said:
to explain away the horrific aspects that scripture provides of Him, because really we probably couldn't allow this sort of God into our hearts without providing God with sufficient reasoning for such atrocities, as if we're embarrassed for God?
I hope that I am doing something better than explaining away. Whether I accomplish better will be up for debate.
I don't think that the horrific or terrifying aspects of God need to be explained away. I do think that we need to wrestle with them if only to try to come to grips with who God is in God's entirety. Garden path spirituality, where God is made out to be nothing more than all of the Care Bears and their cousins rolled into one proves, ultimately, to be unsatisfying. Primarily because among all of the Care Bears and their cousins there is no Justice.
One of the dangers is creating a God who is little better than an anthropomorphized ideal human. A God who even in the 10th Century BC (or BCE which is the colonializing way to render time) operates with a 64th Century AD (CE same colonizing nonsense) morality. And just to make things obvious, that 64th Century AD/CE morality is a figment of our 21st Century hubris. We cannot know what that will be because it is 43 Centuries to come.
Of course one of the interesting things about being created in the image and likeness of God is not that God must be anthropomorphized but rather that humanity represents a deithropomorphication (Don't look that up I just created the word). We have to resist the impulse to fashion God in our image while embracing that we have been created in God's image. So, we do manage to reflect God which was the intent. Because of the Fall we do not reflect God perfectly, as imperfect mirrors we distort what is actually present to be seen. Which is part of the entertainment of funhouse mirrors. The distortions we see would be horrifying if they were actual deformity of a real person, since they disappear the minute we turn our attention on the next mirror they do not pervade our thoughts and thinking.
We see in humanity, particularly in the pursuit of physics a desire to differentiate good from evil. Is that part of humanity reflecting the image and likeness of God? Some argue that to be the case. And coupled alongside of that desire to differentiate between good and evil we see further wrestling with how to promote good while discouraging evil. We see in human history that humanity can be horrifyingly cruel. It isn't always. We are typically dismissive of past horrors unless we are judging them by contemporary standards.
Which is entertaining. I mean one of the criticisms, particularly when we discuss the whole garden and tree business is that God punishes a couple who are basically ignorant and need to eat from a certain tree to gain a certain knowledge whereas when we look around none of us have that particular tree to snack on ourselves so maybe we aren't smart enough to actually understand good and evil ourselves.
Certainly, after all of our years studying it haven't found a way to beat it.
Okay, technically that isn't true. We do know how to beat evil. We just don't have the patience or discipline required to do it. So we blame God for that. If God didn't allow evil to exist we wouldn't have to work so hard to avoid it ourselves.
And part and parcel in blaming God is refusing to see beyond the surface or even to contemplate that there is more to see which escapes us.
And it is the tremendous stories of God venting God's spleen which we find terrifying and seek to use to prove that God is not worthy so lets not believe in God or, we ignore because it means that God is not the warm fuzzy that we crave. Both are effective forms of denial.
What is left then?
More wrestling and trying to comprehend that which is so great in scale we have a hard time wrapping our heads around it.
Where was God in the Holocaust? Where was God when millions of the people he entered into Covenant with went to their deaths? If God is so good then why didn't God stop it?
These are frequently asked questions and theologians wrestle with the answers. Generally, failing to provide answers which come close to satisfying.
The lesser asked questions are how can an evolved humanity still participate in such barbarism? 20th Century Germany for all the progress in human thought, particularly morality which is well within the domain of ethics and Germany has produced more than a few philosophers to help in that department can't arrive at a better solution than the execution of millions of people. Our human brothers and sisters can't come up with a better solution than that and worse, not only did they plan it they carried it out. Ordered hundred to participate and participate they did. And while this was going on where were the "good" humans? The ones who knew better? They were in other countries telling the Jews that they were not welcome.
Sure, we say, had we known what was going on in Germany we would have welcomed the Jews with open arms.
It is a pretty bald-faced lie but we tell it to ourselves.
Or worse, we say, "Well that was then, this is now." Conveniently ignoring the drinking water crisis on most First Nations reserves in Canada or while we step over the homeless in the streets. And why are they there? Not enough money for Mental Health supports. Raise taxes then.
Because we all are lining up to vote for the political party that promises to raise taxes.
We know what the right thing is to do. Doesn't mean we trip all over ourselves to do it.
We don't care to get our hands dirty for the most part.
And yet, God does get God's hands dirty.
Waterfall said:
In a way, maybe we are embarrassed for God for doing such things, so we over rationalize this bad behaviour by calling it a teaching moment.
Please let us not.
I'm not embarrassed for God. I'm stunned by God. Particularly in these stories where God let's loose God's wrath.
13 times in the pages of scripture we hear the narrator of the moment proclaim. "The Lord is slow to anger." Not once do we hear anyone in scripture say that the Lord never gets angry.
1 time in scripture we hear the exhortation not to sin in our anger.
What becomes difficult for us is to understand that anger can be righteous. Even when we can understand that we have difficulty with actions taken while angry being righteous.
One of the best, though most uncomfortable, texts we have looking at this issue is Genesis 18: 16-33 and God's revelation to Abraham that he intends to destroy Sodom for their sins.
It is a powerful text because in it we see a relationship that modern fundamentalism has expressly discouraged. Abraham questions and challenges God to do what is right.
Abraham bargains with God for the city of Sodom and God, surprisingly, tolerates the haggling session. Abraham manages to get God to agree that if ten righteous be found in the city of Sodom God will spare the city from the wrath of God. Even if Abraham had the courage to haggle that down to 5 it would not have been enough.
In the end only 4 righteous are able to be found. But Abraham, even if he couldn't spare the city does, apparently, make an impact upon God.
Genesis 18: 25 said:
Far be it from you to do such a thing, to slay the righteous with the wicked, so that the righteous fare as the wicked! Far be that from you! Shall not the Judge of all the earth do what is just?”
And the 4 righteous that are found are allowed to flee and not perish with Sodom when the wrath of God reigns down upon them.
We aren't meant to cheer that. That is no great victory for the good guys because that is not a redemption story. Yeah four righteous are spared. One of those righteous is also curious and decides to ignore a clear warning given. As clear as the warning given in the garden ages before and just as ignored. Which is something we feel we should blame God for. Not only should God give clear warnings but God should use God's infinite power to force people to follow those warnings say the people most inclined to also argue in favour of a free will.
Waterfall said:
Christian theology seems to require that in order to explain goodness, there must always be "the other side" that potentially will hurts us, in order to bring Goodness into the light and for us to recognize it.
Well, no. Christianity doesn't. Christianity doesn't require evil to exist in order for us to know what is good. Christianity assumes that good and evil exist and then progresses to explain what good is and how we recognize it. If we are poor students of scripture in particular and Christianity, in general, we will notice that Jesus, as the visible representative of the invisible God is not constantly cheery and congenial.
Jesus braids a whip, while stewing about abuses occurring in his Father's house. Beyond that Jesus applies that whip to peoples committing abuses in his Father's house. That is Jesus, taking violent action. We try to justify that by saying that he didn't actually strike anyone with the whip, which scripture doesn't say, he just used it to scare people while he turned the tables over.
As if.
Jesus also tells a few stories of things not ending well for people. The rich man and Lazarus is pretty open. Some rich dude suffering the torment of Hell. Is that a scare tactic? Is Jesus fond of that approach? Or is it a clear warning? The sheep and goats has a rather bleak ending for the goats. There is, in the parable of the wedding feast a guest dressed inappropriately who cannot explain how he came to be at the feast or why he isn't dressed for one who winds up being cast into the outer darkness where there is weeping and gnashing of teeth.
So clearly, some are punished.
Which, we can probably accept to some degree. I mean look at humanity and our penal institutions. We are generally trying to improve them so that there is a better chance for rehabilitation. Unless we have bought into the industrial prison complex then we want more prisons and more prisoners in them.
In Canada we have abandoned a death penalty. Instead we cage our most violent offenders in tiny windowless rooms which they spend 23 out of 24 hours in. Execution is too inhumane. We prove our moral superiority by subjecting our worse to a constant deprivation of all the things which make us truly human. That is how good we are.
We can't for all of our years of examination rehabilitate some individuals who we will label monsters and so we do not bring ourselves to their level by taking their lives we lock them up in what amounts to a macabre hidden zoo where the animals don't get to be looked at. Lacking the desire to smite them we dehumanize them.
Funny, don't you think, the way they don't seem to flourish under our more merciful morality?
Waterfall said:
So God provides the way to suffer
God does not. We do.
God didn't force the Holocaust. God didn't force the pogroms of the Soviet Union. God didn't force the great wars of 1914 and 1939. God doesn't force the hundreds upon hundreds of military conflicts around the globe. God doesn't pull the triggers in all the gun related fatalities in the world.
We do.
We rail at God for not stopping any of that and yet, when the power to stop any of the above was in humanity's hands it still chose to go right ahead.
The moral high ground we claim to judge God from is covered in the blood of innocents we stepped over without second thought.
Waterfall said:
so that we may turn ourselves toward God and cause our knees to bend through worship and obedience
Yeah, very little of that in scripture. One or two actual throwdowns between the Gods and their representatives on earth. Elijah and the prophets of Baal the only story that stands out in memory. It ends with the prophets of Baal being seized and executed. Which is in keeping with commands given about false prophets.
We may not like it. Might find it barbaric for our tastes. Which is good. Because we aren't them and we aren't then. We should be further along.
Waterfall said:
but then there are those that suffer and it only causes them to turn away and reject God because it's not seen as love to allow it.
Part of that is the garden path theology that makes the Prosperity Gospel and Word of Faith expressions of Christianity take root. We have a poorly defined theology of pain and suffering and instead seek to avoid both because they are "bad" things. It is hard to reconcile garden path theology with the theology of the cross. We know Jesus said, "take up your cross . . ." but what we really wanted him to say was, "Be happy."
Philip Yancy has several really good treatments of suffering and pain. They aren't his most popular works because they don't foster garden path thinking.
Waterfall said:
For some instances you want to tell me that God must sacrifice the "bad" people in order to save the "good" people sometimes
Don't put words in my mouth. God does not sacrifice people good or bad. God deals justly with people. And one aspect of God's sense of justice that we conveniently overlook is the whole do unto others bit. Even the Lord's prayer includes what should be, for all those who think about the words as they pray them a very uncomfortable petition.
When we pray, "forgive us our sins as we forgive those who sin against us" we are asking God to be no more or less merciful toward us as we are with others. I suppose if we think we really are that good and kind we find the petition acceptable.
Waterfall said:
when really, it's only the bad or not so perfect that require saving
If we take scripture seriously the bad or the not so perfect include everyone.
Mark 10: 18 said:
Jesus said to him, “Why do you call me good? No one is good but God alone.
Do we dare trust Jesus' assessment in this matter or do we want to argue that he has missed something somewhere?
Waterfall said:
does God abandon them if they never bow even when forced to do so through unimaginable horrendous circumstances?
This presupposes a merit-based salvation and if embraced defeats the concept of grace for reward. Everyone gets what their deeds deserve. Clearly, I reject that option. Apart from that, it brings us closer to the Donatist controversy which was declared heretical and becomes a tangent that will not likely prove helpful to the conversation at hand.
Waterfall said:
According to theology, not necessarily, because.......wait for it, there's Grace....but it doesn't always stop the suffering and MAY be only provided after death and if one is lucky Grace begins while still on earth.
Grace, ultimately does bring an end to suffering. That is the promise of the coming Kingdom. No more tears from sorrow, neither hunger nor thirst. Would we be happier if that was more immediate? Sure, we would.
Waterfall said:
Do we absolutely have to insist that God Himself has a dual nature that includes evil in order to explain love to
Waterfall said:
Nope. We absolutely do not. In fact, Christianity has historically rejected the notion of God having a dual nature, that God is somehow both good and evil. I'm not advocating for a dual nature of God saying that we have to take the good with the bad because that is just the way that it is.
I'm positing that humanity is not well placed to judge God on matters of good and evil. That the totality of God's goodness, when finally seen from a position which can appreciate all, will be far more evident than we see presently.
Waterfall said:
Is pure love too potent for humans to bear while on earth, that we must turn away from
Waterfall said:
it's intensity through pain and suffering in order to accept it and lessen the impact?
Perhaps.
That fits loosely with John's prolegomena
John 1: 10-11 said:
10 He was in the world, and the world came into being through him; yet the world did not know him. 11 He came to what was his own, and his own people did not accept him.
The reflex of the sleeper when a light is turned on is to shield their eyes and seek comfort in darkness. Which doesn't mean that we must take dark action. It means that we cannot, presently, endure the light. We either do the work of acclimating to increased light or we do our best to hide from it.
God in full God mode is hard to take. Before awful was synonymous with disgusting it meant full of awe. Now we use the word awesome.
So, when we say that the destruction of the Egyptian Army or the massacre of 185, 000 Assyrians by an angel in the dead of night is awful we can apply both meanings at the same time without diminishing either. God in action can be terrifying especially if we remember that the same root is present in the word terrific.
If our language is limited when it comes to discussions about God perhaps those limitations also extend to discussions of God's goodness.
Something C.S. Lewis gets an when he takes pains to point out that Aslan is not a tame lion.
Waterfall said:
But if we are told God is love, why is that not sufficient?
It isn't sufficient because it doesn't tell us enough. We do not know more about God when we equate God with love than we knew about God before the equation because we still haven't worked out the boundaries of what love is or isn't.
Is love just? Is love kind? Is love permissive? Is love restrictive and on and on and on. We wind up wrestling with concepts of love the same way we wrestle with concepts of love and nothing is really settled other than the fact we have some kind of trajectory to work with. If we say, God is love then we are, logically, rejecting the notion that God is unloving. Which is good, I think, but makes discussions of justice that much harder because we will seek to tie God's hands. A loving God could not do this or do that.
Waterfall said:
Why do we have to apply our earthly explanation that includes anthropomorphizing God, when God could indeed be a substance of some sort that when one enters into it, it just IS love.
Attempted above.
The substance argument is actually being forwarded presently by black lives matter and the reconciliation and truth process. We should be righteously angry about historic injustices. Angry enough to do something. If we aren't at the very least prepared to smite legislation that perpetuates abuses then we will not accomplish much good or demonstrate much love.
We could just talk about it I suppose. Our vulnerable brothers and sisters are very tired of that approach.
And what of our darling teens who survived the shooting in Parkland Florida? They have harnessed their righteous anger and they are getting things done. Are they not embodying love in all of that?
Waterfall said:
It's why I ask, are we worshiping the right God because frankly a God that includes tests and such that brings us to submission and to our knees, is that love?
God invites us to put God to the test. Ultimately the only way to prove something is real is to test it right? Even theories are tried and tested.
God rarely puts us to the test. Life will do that much faster and more often.
Waterfall said:
Should love not encourage us to stand, not kneel.....respect, not fear....?
Experience teaches what it teaches.
I never feel forced to kneel or bow in the presence of God. I always feel humbled and my response to that humbling is to present as less challenging. Male aggression is what it is. Typically it involves eye contact, the stare down is a test of wills and resolve it is where the first part of any dominance challenge begins and that is almost universal among creatures with eyes. Making eye contact is a challenge. So, bowing is one way to demonstrate that there is no intention to challenge. It is a submission. It is a willingness to make one's self vulnerable.
Kneeling is more of the same. While on my feet, even with my head bowed, I still have the benefits of leverage. With my head bowed I can still see an opponent approaching and I can still attempt evasion. Kneeling takes that away and places me firmly at the mercy of the other. I generally do not include kneeling as part of my prayer or worship repertoire. I do not believe that it is necessary. There are moments when I get a sense that prayer is appropriate and in those moments I do not hesitate to kneel. As with bowing it is a submission. It is a willingness to make myself vulnerable.
Reflecting on both I don't think either are something that God is forcing me to do so that God will then grant me some concession. I believe that they are me, communicating to God that I am at my end. I have nowhere to go, I have no plan whatever. I have exhausted all resources immediately at my disposal and I am in need of whatever crumbs of grace God might sweep from God's table.
I suppose, at that point I am attempting to bargain. I am mindful in those moments of desperation I have nothing to bargain with. I cannot offer God anything God doesn't already have and I have my faith in God's goodness tested.
God's goodness has always been proven. Not in me getting exactly what I want exactly as I want it. Truth be told, I'm batting zero in receptions to the Hail Mary prayers I have thrown up (Hail Mary here being the desperation pass and not some attempt to do things a Roman Catholic way). God's goodness has always been proven in that I do not endure that misery alone and eventually I am lent strength to climb out of that dark place of desperation and face what awaits.
God has never made things easier. God has made tough things easier to bear.
On the day of Redemption what was most needed will be given and what was distraction will be left aside.