St. Augustine's Problem Of Evil

567 Words2 Pages

For the majority of his life, St. Augustine attempted to solve the problem of evil which has plagued Christianity for centuries, because the idea that God created evil causes many contradictions in the religion. If God is the creator of everything, and evil is a thing, then God knowingly created evil; therefore, God cannot be good. This dilemma generates the question of how both God and evil are able to co-exist unless God is not good. Early into his exploration of this question, Augustine was intrigued by a solution introduced by the Manichees. Although their straightforward solution provided Augustine with temporary satisfaction, his conversion to Christianity led him to seek new answers. His eventual resolution of the problem was largely …show more content…

The Manichees’ solution identifies goodness with “corporeal light” and “evil with physical darkness” and gave Augustine “intellectual satisfaction,” knowing that “if one concentrates on the attributes of incorruptibility, inviolability, and immutability, it does not seem impossible for there to be two beings having those attributes in common while occupying opposite ends of the moral spectrum” (Mann 98). The dualism of this idea is “confined within materialism” yet Augustine was not aware of the flaws in this solution as he “had difficulty understanding how anything could exist without being corporeal,” such as God (Mann 98). Eventually Augustine’s conversion to Christianity caused him to dismiss this solution. It was not the dualism that he rejected but the materialism of the Manichaeism “conceptions of God and evil,” and he began to “embrace” a different dualism between spiritual and physical beings (Mann 99). Augustine countered the Manichaeism claim that “there is still an ultimate, invincible source of evil, be it corporeal or incorporeal” by insisting that God is rightfully “sovereign over all other beings,” as well as a spiritual being and in no way physical (Mann

Open Document