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In step

Out of Touch with Reality​


I recently taught a message on wisdom as found in the book of Proverbs. I took a somewhat unusual approach by asking the participants, what is the opposite of wisdom? The response, of course, was “foolishness.”



In the Bible, there is a great deal taught about foolishness and being a fool. In fact, most commentators on the book of Proverbs believe that one of the best ways to grasp what real wisdom is all about, is to examine what Proverbs teaches us about being a fool.
One of the main characteristics of a fool is a person who is seriously out of touch with reality. Most often they are guided by their feelings and do not seem concerned with the consequences of their decisions.

Where I see so many people out of touch with reality is in the laws of sowing and reaping. The Apostle Paul describes this law in Galatians 6:7. I have written about this in previous blogs. It says, “Do not be deceived, God cannot be mocked, whatever a man sows, this he also shall reap.”

I believe there is a key word in this verse: “Whatever.” It is all inclusive. It applies to every area of life and to everyone. In recently teaching on this, I told the men in the audience that one of the most egregious violations of this law is the incredible debt the United States is piling up. Our budget deficit for fiscal year 2024 is $1.9 trillion dollars, which is a staggering amount. It took our country 206 years (1776 to 1982) to run our national debt up to 1.0 trillion dollars. It then took only 41 years (1983-2024) to get the deficit to $35 trillion. Almost all economists will tell you it is unsustainable. There will be a reaping someday. God has made it clear that He will not be mocked.

A number of years ago I wrote a blog titled, “Slow Motion Financial Collapse.” In that blog I shared the brilliant words of the great scholar Os Guiness, from an insightful essay he wrote titled, “This Too Shall Pass.” He addresses the problem of slow-motion cultural decline. He believes there is a simple reason why slow-motion decline is such a particular threat to our country. He says “Great civilizations and empires of the past have always been wrecked on two great reefs – the presence of sin in human society and the passing of time. No human success is forever.”

Guinness then makes this powerful observation:
“The year 1787 witnessed not only the ‘miracle’ of the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia but also the completion of the last volume of Edward Gibbon’s The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. A fall beyond belief, Rome’s end – Gibbon wrote from Luasanne – was “the greatest, perhaps, and most awful scene in the history of mankind.” And the first of the four reasons given? “The injuries of time and nature.” In his Lyceum Address in 1837 Lincoln spoke similarly of “the silent artillery of time.”
John Cogan is a senior fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution. He says:

“It is not so much a problem of having to run a deficit from time to time, it is that it has become a natural component of our government. However when those deficits grow year after year they will lead to slow-motion financial collapse. Governments who ignore ‘the injuries of time’ are those who expose themselves to its destructiveness.”
Author Jim Rickards provides some real insight into this with an article titled “Is this the Moment of Truth?” He quotes from Ernest Hemingway’s novel The Sun Also Rises.
Bill Gorton, a friend of the protagonist, Jake Barnes, has just arrived from New York. Bill is in the café talking with Mike Campbell, an upper-crust Englishman, now fallen on hard times but keeping up appearances.
In the course of telling a story about his tailor, Mike casually mentions his bankruptcy. Here’s the dialogue:

“How did you go bankrupt?” Bill asked.
“Two ways,” Mike said. “Gradually and then suddenly.”
“What brought it on?”
“Friends,” said Mike. “I had a lot of friends. False Friends. Then I had creditors, too. Probably had more creditors than anybody in England.”

Mike believes that he was helpless and that his descent into bankruptcy was beyond his control.
I believe Hemingway’s words “gradually and then suddenly” is a warning on the slow but steady accumulation of debt with no plan to stop it, nor to repay it. Though it can gradually continue over a long period of time, then suddenly there will be a full-blown financial disaster the likes of which no one has ever seen. The collapse itself will be swift as everyone races for the exits.

I believe the words that capture the essence of this blog were written over 200 years ago by Scottish historian Alexander Tyler. He said, “A democracy is always temporary in nature; it simply cannot exist as a permanent form of government. A democracy will continue to exist up until the time that voters discover that they can vote themselves generous gifts from the public treasury. From that moment on, the majority always votes for the candidates who promise the most benefits from the public treasury, with the result that every democracy will finally collapse due to loose fiscal policy.”

What bothers me most is that there is a significant problem yet not one of the current presidential candidates has ever mentioned this very real problem, nor what to do about it. Remember, a fool is a person who is out of touch with reality and that is what we have.
 

Why Does Hosea Warn That God’s People ‘Perish For Lack of Knowledge’?​




Traditionally dated to somewhere in the 8th century BCE, the Book of Hosea is a book filled with warnings to God’s people; warnings given because of their consistent “unfaithfulness” to their deity and His revealed Law.

In the fourth chapter of the book of Hosea, Yahweh declares, “My people perish for lack of knowledge” (V:6). The Hebrew word translated as “perish” implies that they will be “destroyed,” “cut off,” or “cease” to exist. In other words, “the Lord” (or Jehovah) commands His people through His prophet to “hear” His “words” (V:1). And then He describes what He sees as their unfaithful and unrighteous state


Israel’s God speaks of His “people” (or “nation”)—the “children of Israel” (V:1)—as void of “truth” or the “knowledge of God.” He says that they are guilty of dishonesty, immorality, and violence (V:2) and, as a result, they will be given reason to “mourn” and be “weakened” as God takes from the “the beasts of the filed, the fowls of the air, and the fish of the sea” (V:3).

Having described (through the prophet, Hosea) His discontent with His “people,” Yahweh then informs them that they are like people who “contend” or “argue” with God’s priests and, consequently, they will “fall” (or be “destroyed” Heb.) as will their “spokesman” or “false prophet” (V:5). Indeed, He says “I will destroy thy mother”—a metaphor for the “nation of Israel” or the “people of God” living in the 8th century BCE.


All of this explains the context of what Hosea meant when he declared (on behalf of Yahweh) that “My people are destroyed because they have no knowledge” (ERV) or “my people are destroyed by refusing to obey” (as the Contemporary English Version renders the Hebrew).

Essentially, Israel’s prophet in warning the people that they have put themselves in a precarious situation. They have a God who is aware of them, and a prophet who receives His word (or commandments) for them, and yet they ignore what He gives, choosing to “argue” with the priests and follow the “false prophets” who tell them what they want to hear and who lead them down a path that ends in destruction.

The “knowledge” that Hosea says the people of God are lacking—the “knowledge” that leads to their “destruction”—is the “knowledge of God.” It isn’t that they don’t know about Him or aren’t aware of what He has taught.

Rather, they have His law and His inspired messenger (in the form of Hosea), but they reject it. They don’t want it. As the Darby Translation of this passage explains: “My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge; for thou hast rejected knowledge, and I will reject thee, that thou shalt be no priest to me; seeing thou hast forgotten the law of thy God, I also will forget thy children.”

In the Hebrew Bible, the “children of Israel” were “chosen” to be God’s people, the bearers of His covenant, the recipients of His blessings, and the one’s “authorized” to function in His tabernacle and temple.
However, because these ancient “chosen” people loved the “world” more than God, and they desired the “law” of a flexible “false prophet” more than the law of the Divine, their God would reject them as His “people.”


Here Yahweh informs them that He will take from them their status as His “nation” and remove from them the privilege of having “priests.” Because of their unfaithfulness, they will be—in God’s eyes—like the heathen nations who reject Him and, thereby, lose the blessings He has for those who believe and are faithful to God.

Applying this verse to the believers in his day, Theodore, Bishop of Mopsuestia (AD 350-428), summarized God’s message in this way: “My people are like a priest who is compromised. He has fallen from his previous dignity and does not appear worthy for any reason [or in any way], just as a priest who falls into controversy would be set aside and dishonored by everyone… To the greatest extent he will become weak because of the upcoming evils” in which he will engage. (Theodore, Commentary on Hosea 4.)

Thus, in Hosea’s day and Theodore’s—and presumably in our own era—God says that, if the “kingdom of priests, and [His] holy nation” (Exodus 19:6) choose to become “compromised” through sin and rejection of God’s commandments, then they will “destroy” themselves much like a little child that ignores his mother’s warnings to not run into the street.

Theodore, like Hosea, is saying that those who once had God’s ear and aid may lose both if they reject their God for a more worldly life, a “false prophet” who preaches an “easier way,” or a life without “laws.”

And, true to Hosea’s warning, that is exactly what happened. In circa 732 BCE, the Assyrians took God’s people captive, followed by the Babylonians (in circa 586 BCE), then the Persians (circa 539 BCE), and eventually the Romans (AD 70).


Thus, the warnings of Hosea went unheeded, and God’s people “perished for” their lack of obedience to the “knowledge” God had revealed to him.
 

Trump’s Angry Rhetoric vs. Christian Values: It’s not Normal​



Trump’s communication style has been normalized by the way American Evangelicals wholeheartedly endorse him. This is reinforcing the idea of many outside the Church that Christians are defined by their hate for those who are different from them. How can we come together and find a way for the church to model to the world the LOVE of JESUS rather than only his JUDGEMENT and WRATH as seems to be the case too often at the moment? We need to be offering forgiveness not rejection.

Rudeness, misogyny, and brashness is seen in every speech Trump makes and this has not been challenged. Trump is being upheld by many Christians as a “strong” leader to be emulated. This bring shame on the church, and is risking a whole generation of Christians believing it is OK to speak like that. Where is the humility and meekness?

As a society today we seem to be becoming more angry, less forgiving and less compassionate. Social media behavior and language is really very similar to the insulting and belittling way that Trump often speaks about his opponents. And on social media this language is not unique to the right. People throw insults at each other in a way that denigrates the name of Jesus.

In further reflection on my previous article Is Trump Fueling The End-Times Rebellion Of The Church? I realize that perhaps my title was a bit biased. After all, as the article points out it is not just Trump who maps onto some of the things Paul warns us about in the end times rebellion.
But in the aftermath of the election, where are the Christians who are even willing to say “Look we supported Trump because of his views on abortion, but we do want to say that Christian speech should not be like this”?
It was a secular podcaster who has described the most clearly the danger of our acceptance that this is now an OK way for public leaders to speak:

“The bellicosity of this man’s rhetoric is having an affect in your family and the culture in our society. And it’s giving licence to people to be cruel to each other. I don’t want to represent that” Anthony Scaramucci

I am not sure whether he has a faith or not, but if so it’s not part of his regular public persona. Where are the explicit Christian voices loudly saying that tone matters, that character matters, that maybe we voted for Trump for other reasons, but we don’t support his constant belittling of others and we do not want our children growing up in a world where it is now the normal way for people to speak to one another in this bellicose way (which means argumentative, belligerent, aggressive and wanting to start a fight).

Too many Christians have taken on the idea that we should be at war against “the liberals” and there is a distinct lack of willingness to listen to alternative views, to be winsome, and to try and build a society where all can truly live together at peace, and hence the gospel can go forth.
Scaramucci also spoke in that podcast about “belonging without othering” and I think that is something for Christians to consider. We are meant to be a people of love who exist for the benefit of our non-members and who call out to them with gentleness and humility rather than excluding them and becoming more and more angry with them.
As an old issue of Christianity Today said:

The Scriptures command us to be gentle and kind to unbelievers, not because we are not at war, but because we’re not at war with them (2 Tim. 2:26). When we see that we are warring against principalities and powers in the heavenly places, we can see that we’re not wrestling against flesh and blood (Eph. 6:12). The path to peace isn’t through bellicosity or surrender, but through fighting the right war (Rom. 16:20).
Moore, R.D. (2011) “The Gospel at Ground Zero: The Horrors of 9/11 Were Not unlike Those of Good Friday,” Christianity Today, p. 27.

For those of us who never supported Trump, we need to recognize that “They won. We lost. Next” which is also from the same podcast. We need to try and help other Christians understand that we need to be more gracious towards one another. Perhaps I should start by trying to be more gracious towards those who did support Trump. Many of them probably do still have reservations about Trump’s manner and behavior. Not to mention the constant lies, and the moral issues that seem to come up over and over again. How can I connect with my brothers and sisters who felt compelled despite those reservations to vote for him?
 

Peacemaking in a Polarized World​



In this article, we think about how to resist what scientists are calling “polarized information ecosystems.” Polarization is widely discussed. But widely discussed subjects are rarely well-discussed. Too many commentators continue to utilize the increasingly insufficient “echo chamber” hypothesis to explain the political division we see in American society.



I argue that Christians have a primary responsibility to live lives of holiness. Holiness demands distinct ways of living which transcend the negative and sinful ways that worldly systems attempt to trap us in. In a world that profits from division, Christ says blessed are the peacemakers (Matt. 5:9). This work of peacemaking must first be embodied within the Body of Christ before it is carried out into the world. Christians, and indeed any ideologically diverse communities, are well-positioned to cultivate ways of resisting the polarizing forces driving our nation down.



Echo Chambers Are Not the Problem​

Studies on the flow of information online in 2013 and 2014 initially indicated that users were being bombarded with information that already affirmed their preconceived notions of politics and reality. The well-known “echo chamber” hypothesis posits that isolating oneself from different viewpoints drives ideological and affective polarization. The first kind of polarization is when ideologies become increasingly opposed to each other. The second, affective polarization, is when groups feel increasingly opposed to each other.

These echo chambers, according to Petter Törnberg, are “homogeneous clusters protected from opposing individuals and perspectives—which are said to lead to the divergence of opinions toward more extreme positions” (1). When understood in this sense, echo chambers are not the problem.
However, philosopher C. Thi Nguyen does make a helpful distinction between epistemic bubbles and echo chambers. Epistemic bubbles, Nguyen argues, happen when communities are simply unexposed to other perspectives. Echo chambers in Nguyen’s definition have more to do with how outside voices are treated and perceived. Nguyen writes,
By discrediting outsiders, echo chambers leave their members overly dependent on approved inside sources for information. In epistemic bubbles, other voices are merely not heard; in echo chambers, other voices are actively undermined (142).
Moving forward, we will focus mostly on quantitative research on polarization. In these quantitative articles, such distinctions are not used; epistemic bubbles and echo chambers are usually taken to mean the same thing by researchers.

Polarization Driven by Interaction, Not Isolation​

In the latest literature on polarization, researchers are finding that it is not isolation that is causing polarization. Rather, it is more interaction. Petter Törnberg describes the process this way. We quote Törnberg at length:
the diverse and nonlocal interactions of digital media drive plural conflicts to align along partisan lines [and] drive a global alignment of conflicts by effacing the counterbalancing effects of local cultures. The model thus suggests that digital media can intensify affective polarization by contributing to a runaway process in which more and more issues become drawn into a single growing social and cultural divide, in turn driving a breakdown of social cohesion (2).
In other words, media functions by taking disputes which often do not materialize in our everyday lives. It then turns these issues into two-sided winner-takes-all conflicts. Individuals are then made to feel like they must take a side.
This means that we are not often trapped in isolated bubbles of information. Rather, we are forced into confrontation with the “other side.” As Törnberg writes, “digital media does not appear to lock people into isolated echo chambers but rather intensifies interaction with diverse actors and ideas from outside one’s local bubble” (3).

Polarization Caused by Sorting​

Political scientists have traditionally held that “unified” societies are not ideologically homogenous. Rather, the various communities in a harmonious society all have things that they disagree with each other on. Groups will thus be allied regarding some issues, and opponents on others. This is what political scientists refer to as “cross-cutting.” These multiply aligned alliances and oppositions essentially cancel each other out, making room for peaceful coexistence.

However, the media scape is not characterized by cross-cutting differences. As Törnberg tells us, media actively reduces these cross-cutting divides into diametrically opposed party platforms. Thus, differences no longer cut across communities; communities are being reconfigured or “sorted” into two major communities. These two communities—Republicans and Democrats—have now sorted themselves into a situation where there are no more complex loyalties. Who “we” are and who “they” are is now clear as day.

This social sorting even extends to previously ordinary aspects of our lives. In what some scholars call “oil spill” polarization, it is not so much that ideologies are becoming further apart. Rather, these two opposing ways of thinking are becoming more expansive. Spending habits, levels of education, consumption lifestyles, and so on are becoming markers of identity in this ever-expanding culture war.

Another Picture of Polarization​

However, in other strands of scholarly literature we do find other pictures of how polarization happens. One study conducted by Christopher K. Tokita et al. offers some insight into how individual practices can worsen polarization, perhaps among more extreme users.
Tokita and colleagues find that individuals engage in a different kind of sorting. When an “information ecosystem” is already polarized, users will begin sorting themselves into increasingly homogenous groups. This is largely done by unfollowing others in one’s social network. Thus, further polarization can be accounted for when users unfollow others with different viewpoints (Tokita et al., 1).
The authors find that the more one isolates oneself in a separated community, the more detached they become from information. This detachment even includes their preferred sources of news and information. There is a trade-off for becoming more extreme. As Tokita et al. write,
Rather than creating false beliefs, the power of misinformation may lie more specifically in further isolating consumers of misinformation from the broader society. Since the topics and emphasis of misinformation will often be highly dissimilar from mainstream news coverage, users who heavily consume misinformation will be in an uncorrelated (or perhaps even anticorrelated) information ecosystem relative to individuals who consume only mainstream media (7).

The Political Effects of Polarization​

Polarization is not just a talking point or a buzzword. It is a phenomenon with concrete political effects. Because we as Christians are told that we are not truly at home in this world (1 Pet. 2:11), I like to think about political life in this metaphor. In this world, we are like guests staying in someone else’s home. And a good guest must learn about the host and the rules of the home.

In the US, being a good guest requires living in the spirit of how the government was designed. Yet, polarization’s effects on how we approach politics hinders this. Törnberg raises the Congress as an example. The two branches of Congress—the Senate and the House—are meant to represent on a federal level the interests of individual states and regions. How can representatives represent their local communities when all communities are being subsumed into the same one-dimensional conflicts? What implications does this have for local policy (Törnberg, 8)?

Trading local issues for these ever expanding partisan wars is leading us further and further away from the design of our political system. This is not to reify the system as our moral end all be all. But if the people of a country are losing grip with how the country really works, can this nation really be by the people and for the people?

Resisting Polarization as the Body of Christ​

And now, we have our call to action. If Christ blesses the peacemakers, how shall we make peace in a polarized society? Resistance to polarization takes place in our personal practices, our ecclesial life, and our organizing and advocacy efforts.
The classical liberal fantasy of making political decisions through rational deliberation is effectively gone in the digital world. Törnberg writes that these spaces are “not merely arenas for rational deliberation and political debate but as spaces for social identity formation and for symbolic displays of solidarity with allies and difference from outgroups” (10). People do not hear from other voices in order to learn more. They do it to learn who they are not and strengthen their own sense of group loyalty.
The question for the Church is how our own identities can be presented and enacted in the digital space in faithful ways.

I. Personal Practices​

The first thing that we as Christians can do to counteract the effects of polarization in our own lives is to keep our connections open. If someone disagrees with you, you do not need to be their best friend. But stick around for them. Show grace for them and for yourself. Be hospitable as you allow them to continue sharing your own space (this is all within reason; even Paul and Barnabas had to break ties at some point!).

Maintaining a social network is not merely a symbolic way of keeping the peace. Keeping community, even tapping into multiple communities, is key to staying informed. As Tokita et al. show us, isolating oneself also silences the sources that one prefers listening to.
But most importantly, being exposed to other points of view is not inherently going to make someone more open-minded. This is a myth that must be addressed. We must do the inward, spiritual work of reorienting how we feel about others (indeed, politics has been reduced to feeling), not just what we think about what they say. Lean into God’s grace, compassion, and will to reconciliation as you navigate these treacherous waters.

II. Ecclesial Life​

In the Bible, Paul calls the Church the Body of Christ (1 Cor. 12:12). This metaphor is partly political. Because we are many members, each with its own purpose and gifts, we are bound to have political differences as well. The politics of the hand is not the same as the politics of the foot, so to say.
The Church cannot operate off of one singular political ideology, for it is a body and not a singular member. After all, the Head of the Body is Christ, and Christ’s politics remain inexpressible by the world’s ideologies and political structures. We can sometimes determine which political systems are truly anti-Christ. But for the vast majority of the time, no single group of Christians can preach their politics as the only good, true, and beautiful one.

Therefore, we must lean into this political diversity in the Christian community. We are all meant to do things for the glory of God. Can’t different politics facilitate this multifaceted calling? Can’t some give to the poor interpersonally while others advocate for less poverty?
Resistance to polarization on the collective level must start with the Church community. By navigating our own political differences, we will learn how to engage with those in the world.

III. Organizing and Advocacy​

This is where things will get more explicitly political. Polarization is a direct result of market interests. As mentioned in a previous article on the internet’s “marketplace of ideas”, social media companies profit the more we give up our data. We give up data through our online engagement, and they maximize profits by maximizing our engagement. As it turns out, provoking the most negative emotions like anxiety, anger, or offense is what does the trick.
It is no coincidence that there is not only ideological polarization but affective polarization as well. These emotions are provoked by design. And the designers of these online spaces are those who love money. Paul’s words to Timothy are proven yet again (1 Tim. 6:10), for even the evil of polarization results from the love of money.

We must turn this into a political issue. Polarization is driving the nation apart. The ones who are at the most extreme ends are losing touch with reality through the constricted flow of information. And the majority of Americans who are more moderate are becoming increasingly disengaged from a two-party system in which they can no longer see themselves.
Write your representatives. Organize and educate. Recognize that we war not with flesh and blood, but with principalities on high (Eph. 6:12).
There are things that we can do to resist this. It is time that we begin the work of peacemaking.

References​

Nguyen, C Thi. “Echo Chambers and Epistemic Bubbles.” Episteme 17, no. 2 (2020): 141-161. https://www.cambridge.org/core/jour...emic-bubbles/5D4AC3A808C538E17C50A7C09EC706F0.
Tokita, Christopher K., Andrew M. Guess, and Corina E. Tarnit. “Polarized information ecosystems can reorganize social networks via information cascades.” PNAS 118, no. 50 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2102147118.
 

How Does Evil Differ from Suffering?​



It’s bad enough to do evil and abstain from good. But God condemns the moral sleight of hand by which we confuse good and evil: “Woe to those who call evil good and good evil, who put darkness for light and light for darkness, who put bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter” (Isaiah 5:20).

Paul built on this when he wrote, “Hate what is evil; cling to what is good” (Romans 12:9). Passages like Amos 5:14–15; Romans 16:19; 1 Peter 3:11 and 3 John 11 all presume we know the difference between good and evil. But in a culture that so often switches the price tags so what’s valuable looks worthless and what’s cheap demands a high price, this doesn’t come naturally. We must regularly withdraw to Scripture and ask God’s Spirit to train our minds and consciences to recognize what’s truly good and what’s truly evil.

Evil, in its essence, puts someone or something else in God’s place.

Most people today understand evil as anything that harms others. The more harm done, the more evil the action.


Evil is the fundamental and troubling departure from goodness. The Bible uses the word evil to describe that which violates God’s moral will. The first human evil occurred when Eve and Adam disobeyed God. From that original sin—a moral evil—came the consequence of suffering. Although suffering results from moral evil, it is distinguishable from it, just as an injury caused by drunken driving isn’t synonymous with the offense.

Evil could be defined as “the refusal to accept the true God as God.” For this very reason, the Bible treats idolatry as the ultimate sin.

Any attempt to liberate ourselves from God’s standards constitutes rebellion against God. In replacing His standards with our own, we not only deny God but affirm ourselves as God. Evil is always an attempted coup, an effort to usurp God’s throne.

Psalm 2 describes earthly kings standing against God and His anointed one and declaring, “Let us break their chains.” God scoffs at them and replies that He has installed His king on Zion—and they have no hope of conquering His Chosen One (see 2:2–6).

Evildoers not only reject God’s law and create their own; they attempt to take the moral high ground by calling God’s standards “unloving,” “intolerant,” and “evil.”


Moral evil comes in two forms—blatant evil that admits its hatred for goodness, and subtle evil that professes to love goodness while violating it.

Some view evil as the absence of good.

The logic goes like this: There is no such thing as cold, only lower degrees of heat (or the complete lack of it). Darkness is not the opposite of light, but the absence of light. Death is not the opposite of life, but its privation. A cloth can exist without a hole, but that hole cannot exist without the cloth. Good can, did, and will exist without evil. But evil cannot exist without the good it opposes. A shadow is nothing but the obstruction of light—no light, no shadow. Augustine said in The City of God, “Evil has no positive nature; but the loss of good has received the name ‘evil.’”

New Testament vocabulary sometimes supports this concept. We see it in words such as unrighteous, unjust, ungodly, lawless, and godless. These suggest that we best understand evil as a departure from God’s goodness. However, while this definition contains helpful insights, it doesn’t go far enough.

More than merely the absence of good, evil is the corruption of good.

The Holocaust was not “nothing.” The Killing Fields were not “nothing.” The 9/11 attacks were not “nothing.” All were real horrors, down to every emaciated corpse, bullet-riddled body, and person jumping out a window.


Perhaps we could better conceive of evil as a parasite on God’s good creation, since a parasite is something substantial. Without the living organism it uses as a host, the parasite cannot exist. As metal does not need rust, but rust needs metal, so good does not need evil, but evil needs good.

Grace and forgiveness, both expressions of God’s eternal character, are moral goods, but without evil they wouldn’t have become clearly evident. Father, Son, and Holy Spirit don’t need compassion, mercy, grace, or forgiveness. These qualities could only be fully expressed to finite and fallen creatures.

Some of God’s virtues will forever capture the spotlight that, without evil and suffering’s temporary hold on us, never would have taken the stage.

Immoral acts are primary evils, while their consequences, including suffering, are secondary evils.

Scripture portrays moral evils of rebelling against God, and natural evils including disease and disasters.

Child abuse is evil, demonstrated by the harm it inflicts on the innocent victim. We consider cancer and earthquakes evils because they bring suffering. While the evils of cancer and earthquakes differ from the moral evil of rebellion against God, the two are related. Human rebellion led God to curse the earth, which brought severe physical consequences.


Diseases and disasters are in a sense unnatural because they result from evil, an unnatural condition.

Disobeying God, inseparable from the failure to trust God, was the original evil. From that sin—a moral evil—came the consequence of suffering. So suffering follows evil as a caboose follows an engine. Scripture sometimes refers to calamities and tragic events as evils. To distinguish these, we can call moral evil primary evil, and suffering secondary evil.

“But just as every good promise of the LORD your God has come true, so the LORD will bring on you all the evil he has threatened, until he has destroyed you from this good land he has given you” (Joshua 23:15). Note that the “evil” mentioned here is not moral evil. Rather, it’s a holy God bringing judgment upon guilty people.

In some cases God builds punishments into moral evils. Paul says of those committing sexual sins that they “received in themselves the due penalty for their perversion” (Romans 1:27).

Secondary evils provoke our indignation.

Why do innocent people suffer? Although many secondary evils befall us even when we have not directly committed a sin that causes them, we would not have to deal with secondary evils if we didn’t belong to a sinful race. Short-term suffering serves as a warning and foretaste of eternal suffering. Without a taste of Hell, we would neither see its horrors nor feel much motivation to do everything possible to avoid it. Hence, the secondary evil of suffering can get our attention and prompt us to repent of our primary moral evil.


God uses secondary evils as judgments that may produce ultimate good.

Jeremiah 11:17 uses the same Hebrew word for evil in both the primary sense (moral evil) and the secondary sense (adverse consequences of moral evil): “The LORD of hosts, who planted you, has pronounced evil against you because of the evil of the house of Israel and of the house of Judah, which they have done to provoke Me by offering up sacrifices to Baal” (NASB).

Because our English word has a narrower meaning, most translators normally choose “evil” when used of people disobeying God, but “disaster” or “calamity” when used of God bringing judgment on sinful people.

After promising judgment, God also promised He would bring good to His people—good that ultimately would outweigh the evil. Note the repetition of the word “good” in the following. God says,

They will be my people, and I will be their God. I will give them singleness of heart and action, so that they will always fear me for their own good and the good of their children after them. I will make an everlasting covenant with them: I will never stop doing good to them, and I will inspire them to fear me, so that they will never turn away from me. I will rejoice in doing them good and will assuredly plant them in this land with all my heart and soul. (Jeremiah 32:38–41)


God’s people endure temporary judgments for their sin. But God makes an “everlasting covenant,” promising, “I will never stop doing good to them.”

Evils, whether moral or natural, will not have the final say. God will replace both with everlasting good.

The surgeon inflicts suffering on the patient and the parent disciplines the child, but they do good, not evil. Likewise, God can permit and even bring suffering upon His children without being morally evil. God hates moral evil and is committed to utterly destroying it. Yet for now He allows evil and suffering, and can providentially use them for His own good purposes.
 
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