I do not believe that evil-as we typically understand it-exists in the world. I believe that what we perceive as evil is simply our misdirected use of the good that God provides. The reason that we even have an experience of perceived evil is because for the soul to experience itself as any particular thing, the exact opposite of that thing must come into the space. In other words, in this relative existence, hot cannot be hot without cold, tall cannot be tall without short, and you cannot be you without that which is not you. So I believe that what we call evil is just the opposite end of the spectrum of good, not something separate. Following this line of thought, the next step our logical minds would take, it would seem that in order for God to experience Itself as the all-consuming good, there had to be something called the all-consuming evil.
Wrong! There is only God. God is all there was, all there is, and all there ever will be. Yet God wished to know Itself in Its own experience. Logically speaking, that which is divine cannot know and experience Itself except in the presence of that which is not divine. The problem is that which is not divine does not exist. So, since we have the power to create anything, we have simply called it forth through our thought process.
That is to say we have imagined it. All religions-and philosophies-must wrestle with the problem of evil. We can look all around the world and see what we would clearly label as evil. Many say, therefore, that in addition to the power of God, who is good, there must be a second power at work in the universe: a power of Evil, often personified as the Devil. Traditional Christianity teaches that the Devil is a fallen angel, part of God’s creation that went wrong. This makes evil a twofold problem.
The Term Paper on Moral Evil God One Universe
... power of God, and the true good of God. If God is all good, and has the power to stop evil and doesn't, then God ... like a hat. It's momentous, the Phish experience is bigger than all of us, and ... however, are dependent on something else, and called contingent, while some things depend only on ... that there was an explanation.This illustrates what Taylor calls a metaphysical belief 'that seems to be ...
If God is all-good and all-powerful, how come there is evil at all? And if there is a Devil, how come God’s power or ability as a universe designer is so limited or flawed that things got so screwed up? Some say God sends evil to punish people for misdeeds, but that is unworthy of a merciful God, and that would mean that at least some of his creatures by being merciful are better than God-another problem. So what is it-is God weak or mean? My answer to that question is that God simply is. I don’t believe that I must qualify God with the terms all-loving, all-powerful, and all-knowing because God is Love and God is Power and God is Knowledge. God simply is. Religious Science, or Science of Mind, founded in 1927 by Ernest Holmes, teaches that there is only one Presence and Power and that that Power is good. Evil is simply good that is immature or misdirected (Holmes).
It has no power of its own; it has only the power that our minds give to it. It doesn’t have to be destroyed or fought, any more than when you come into a darkened room and turn on the light, you have to chase the darkness away. It is dealt with by thinking about and working to bring about the good that you want in its place. It is difficult for us to understand why God would allow some [evil] things to happen. But simply because we find it difficult to imagine what reasons God could have for permitting them, does not mean that no such reasons exist. It is possible that such reasons are not only beyond our present knowledge, but also beyond our present ability to understand.
A child does not always understand the reasons that lay behind all that his father allows or does not allow him to do. It would be unrealistic for us to expect to understand all of God’s reasons for allowing all that He does. We do not fully understand many things about the world we live in-what lies behind the force of gravity for instance, or the exact function of subatomic particles-yet we believe in these physical realities. So, if I decide that I am going to ram my car into a tree, it would be a very petty, small-minded God that would stop me from doing that. It would require that God make a judgment about me and whether I’m too good or too bad to have something like that happen to me. God is not judgmental.
The Essay on God vs. Evil
God, like Adam and Eve, suffered consequences. Genesis 3:14-17, God says: “Because you did this…” referring to the serpent who tempted Eve, then to Eve, and finally to Adam, “Because you did…” Humankind invited the existence of Evil into the goodness of God’s creation. No longer did God walk in the breeze of the Garden of Eden; no longer did God remain in the actual presence of humankind. No ...
God is impersonal. God doesn’t say this is good or bad-God doesn’t interfere with law. God is Law. God just says if you do this, this is the consequence.
I believe that we live in a cause and effect universe. For every action there is a reaction. In Science of Mind we know that we are the creative mediums that God expresses through, therefore our thoughts create our reality (Holmes).
Because of our innate creativity we are able to bring forth in our lives any experience which we so desire.
What we focus our attention on manifests in our lives. We can produce in our lives all the freedom, abundance, peace, and fulfillment we desire. At the same time if where we focus our attention is on lack, limitation, and negativity that is what we get. However, the good news is that no matter how terrible a situation seems to be, there is always good in it, because there is always God in it, for God is everywhere and all is in God. He is there as a source of all the love and intelligence that we need to deal with whatever we have to face and triumph over it. So, by raising our consciousness to higher ground, it is possible to rise above the idea of evil in our lives.
In conclusion, evil is not a thing in and of itself, but it is an absence of good, just as darkness is the absence of light or death is an absence of life. Evil is really a kind of ignorance or an unenlightened belief. We have created a concept of evil in our minds-but if our mind can create that concept, it can create a different paradigm to replace it-one good. References: o Holmes, Ernest, “The Science of Mind,” Putnam Edition 1997, 1938.