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A Modern Irenaean Theodicy — Professor Hick on Evil

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 April 2024

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In attempting to deal with the traditional problem of evil Christian theologians have had recourse to the presentation of theodicies. The two most influential kinds (though advocates of either can agree on some points) have been the Augustinian and the Irenaean and today the latter is the most popular largely as a result of its exposition by Professor John Hick. I have no distinctive theodicy to offer, nor am I sure either that one can be offered or that the Christian is bound to offer one. Perhaps, after all, what Alvin Plantinga calls a ‘defence’, coupled with an appeal to mystery is in order. I do, however, find the Irenaean theodicy in Hick’s form difficult to accept and am therefore disturbed to find it currently so influential. In what follows, and in the briefest possible manner, my aim is to indicate why others should feel the same.

The problem of evil is a problem for the theist. According to theism the following propositions are true:

1. God exists.

2. God is an all-powerful, all knowing and all-good agent.

The problem is how to square acceptance of these propositions with the acceptance of the facts of evil. By ‘evil’ here is meant (a) moral evil [viz. morally undesirable actions of human agents who frequently inflict suffering and harm on each other], and (b) natural evil [viz. pain producing events in the world of nature and undesirable though not necessarily pain producing natural events and states of affairs].

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1976 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

References

1 Evil and the God of Love, Macmillan, 1966Google Scholar. See also God and Universe of Faiths, Macmillan, 1973Google Scholar. Hick of course, has been criticised but criticism of him has often been based on a misunderstanding of his position. CF. Religious Studies, April 1967 and Religious Studies 3, pp. 539–546. For useful discussions of Hick the reader should note Illtyd Trethowan's article in Journal of Theological Studies, October 1967 and Keith Ward's Ethics and Christianity, Allen & Unwin, 1970Google Scholar.

2 God, Freedom and Evil, London, 1975Google Scholar.

3 For a useful treatment along these lines see Lewis, H.D., The Philosophy of Religion, English Universities Press, 1975, Chapter 26Google Scholar.

4 God and the Universe of Faiths, pp. 67–69.

5 Plantinga, God and Other Minds, 1967, p. 134.

6 The Moment of Truth, London, Burns & Oates, 1965Google Scholar.

7 Evil and the God of Love, p. 323.