The existence of evil is the most powerful objection to theism, but it does not constitute a logical disproof. Catholic theology holds that God permits evil because he can draw greater good from it, and because genuine free will requires the possibility of choosing wrongly.
If God is willing to prevent evil but not able, he is not omnipotent. If he is able but not willing, he is not good. If he is both able and willing, why does evil exist?
Free will explains human cruelty, but it does not explain earthquakes, childhood cancer, or animal suffering. These are not caused by human choice.
We know that in everything God works for good with those who love him, who are called according to his purpose.
The logical problem of evil, in its classical form, claims that an omnipotent, omniscient, and omnibenevolent God is logically incompatible with the existence of evil. Alvin Plantinga's Free Will Defence has shown that this is not the case: it is logically possible that God cannot create a world with free creatures who never choose evil. If free will is a genuine good, and if genuine free will includes the possibility of choosing wrongly, then God's permission of evil is logically consistent with his goodness.
The evidential problem of evil is stronger: even if evil is logically compatible with God, the sheer amount and distribution of evil makes God's existence improbable. Catholic theology responds with epistemic humility. We cannot see the full picture. A surgeon's actions look like assault to someone who does not understand the purpose of surgery. God's purposes may include goods we cannot perceive from our limited vantage point.
Natural evil (earthquakes, disease, childhood suffering) is the hardest case. The free will defence explains moral evil but not natural evil directly. Catholic theology holds that the created world is good but fallen, that physical suffering can be redemptive when united with Christ's suffering (Col 1:24), and that the full accounting includes eternity.
The Book of Job is the definitive scriptural response. God does not explain why Job suffers. He reveals himself. The answer to suffering is not a theory but a person. Christ entered suffering, endured it, and transformed its meaning. The cross is God's response to the problem of evil: not an explanation but a participation.
The problem of evil is the most honest and powerful objection to Christianity. Catholics should never dismiss it glibly. The proper response is honest engagement, not defensive deflection.
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