Evil And Omnipotence Essay

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Since the time that we as humans believed in God/an omnipotent power that rules over the universe, we have raised many questions about this God. One of the most recurring questions was, is it reasonable to believe in an all-powerful and all-loving God? There are many reasons to believe either side. On one side people do believe in a benevolent omnipotent God because of the way the world is, how beautiful our earth is, and how it was created among various other things. On the other side people are not willing to believe in an all-loving and all-powerful God because of all the evil in the world, how corrupt it is, and the injustice going on in the world. I am going to show the argument for both sides and why they think that way and will back it up with textual evidence from a philosopher. But the side that I think is the most logical and makes the most sense would be that God cannot be all-loving and all-powerful, if there is so much evil currently going on in the …show more content…

This is a part of the text, “Evil and Omnipotence” by J.L Mackie. In this J.L says, But it does so only by qualifying some of the propositions that constitute the problem. First, it sets a limit to what God can do, saying that God cannot create good without simultaneously creating evil, and this means either that God is not omnipotent or that there are some limits to what an omnipotent thing can do. It may be replied that these limits are always presupposed, that omnipotence has never meant the power to do what is logically impossible, and on the present view the existence of good without evil would be a logical impossibility. This interpretation of omnipotence may, indeed, be accepted as a modification of our original account which does not reject anything that is essential to theism, and I shall in general assume it in the subsequent

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