by jimwalton » Thu Feb 13, 2020 11:16 am
> A few problems with the passage cited. One is the comparison of a non concious material object, clay pottery, with living beings.
Sure, I get that, but the point of the analogy is conditionality, which carries over both categories. Just as the potter improvises his design based on the condition of the clay, so the Lord improvises according to people's responses. It's also true of farmers working the land; they make adjustments based on soil conditions. And therefore the point is that all is not deterministically designed in an immutable flow. The condition of the objects have a role in how situations play out.
> God has both complete creative power and in addition knowledge of what he is creating.
Indisputable. But what if God creates a being who also has creative power and knows what he is creating (beings such as humans with our creativity, knowledge, and imagination)?
> As such, he is likely to have more foresight than a human potter working within only limited knowledge, albeit knowledge nonetheless.
Of course God does have more foresight than a human. By making room for human response, God doesn't compromise his omniscience, sovereignty, or immutability. Since God is able to see because all time for Him is "present," He can accommodate choice without determining choice. He has granted free will to humans, and so has made room for legitimate response to circumstances and vagaries of human will. This relational flexibility is a corollary of His immutability, which encompasses His just and compassionate nature. The allowance of contingency doesn't diminish God's sovereignty. The interplay between a sovereign God and creature to whom he has granted a degree of freedom can result in contingent statements of divine intention being altered or unrealized.
> there are other methods of reversing an evil state of affairs than destruction and suffering.
How can you be so sure?
The world is in fear right now of the corona virus. We have a limited number of choices as to how to reverse this state of affairs: (1) destroy the virus—find a way to kill it to stop it; (2) mutate the virus to render it innocuous; (3) protect against it (vaccination). Those are our choices.
So, if evil is a particular state of affairs with distinct properties, deficits and benefits, as we have discussed, there are perhaps very few choices as to how to effectively reverse it.
But I feel we have strayed to the side. According to biblical theology, evil can't be reversed, any more than death can be removed from biology. Once it's in the system, it's in, and it has to be dealt with appropriately; it can't be reversed. Again, there are limited options as to how it can be dealt with. We can't just say "Shazzam" and make it disappear. This isn't magic and sleight of hand but rather reality.
> That inclination did not occur in a vacuum.
Of course not. Agreed.
> Do seemingly innocent victims of murder and natural disaster deserve what happens to them?
Generally no, though at times they play a part. A person walking alone on a dark street in a dangerous part of town is not totally faultless for inviting crime; so also a person who builds a house on a tectonic fault line can't be held cleanly blameless when the earthquake destroys their home. That doesn't mean they deserve what happened to them, but they are to some extent complicit in the result.
> Are these events part of a narrative that God shapes in accordance with reversing an imbalance or issue such as that alluded to in Jeremiah?
I would say no, these are not to what Jeremiah is referring.