13 Şubat 2013 Çarşamba

Evil Versus Suffering (PhD Edit)

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Evil Versus Suffering
Vermeer,within his study, makes a distinction between evil and suffering.[1]  Evil is a harmful event or situation thatcauses human suffering.[2]  Natural disasters and disease would beconsidered evil;[3]whereas, in contrast, suffering is the active emotional human response to evil.[4]  Evil is not suffering, but it is only whenhuman beings attempt to find meaning with the negative results of evil thatsuffering exists.[5]  As Francis Young (1999) points out, there isno simple satisfactory answer for suffering within theodicy,[6]but the cross of Christ has the power to provide a genuine meaning in the livesof Christians.[7]  Suffering was part of Christ’s redemptivework.[8]  Bonhoeffer writes suffering,along with rejection ‘sum up the whole cross of Jesus’ as he died on the cross,Christ faced human rejection.[9]  Gebara offers a different position when shewrites that the suffering of a God-man has been used by certain people toaccept their own suffering within conformity,[10]and some religious movements can use this concept of suffering to cover up‘misery or unjust crosses.’[11]  Gebara notes that suffering caused by evilpersons committing wrong actions, should be distinguished from ‘anguish presentin every human life.’[12]  The existence of evil is understood,[13]but Vermeer and the Nijmegen school are attempting to make empirical sense ofresulting suffering, in light of the saving work of Christ on the cross.  


[1] Vermeer (1999: 7).[2] Vermeer (1999: 7).[3] Vermeer (1999:7).  [4] Vermeer (1999: 7).  [5] Vermeer (1999: 7).[6] Young (1999: 556).[7] Young (1999: 556).[8] Bloesch (1987: 127).[9] Bonhoeffer (1937)(1963: 96).[10] Gebara (2002: 90).[11] Gebara (2002: 90).[12] Gebara (2002: 90).[13] From research, at least within liberal andconservative Christian traditions, evil is deemed to exist, as is the problemof evil.  This is not to state that everysingle documented religious philosophy acknowledges evil and the problem ofevil.
BLOESCH, DONALD G. (1987) Freedom for Obedience, San Francisco, Harper and Rowe Publishers.

BONHOEFFER, DIETRICH (1931)(1996) Act and Being, Translated from the German Edition, Hans-Richard Reuter (ed.), English Edition, Wayne Whitson Floyd, Jr., (ed.), Translated by H. Martin Rumscheidt, Fortress Press, Minneapolis.

BONHOEFFER, DIETRICH (1937)(1963) The Cost of Discipleship, Collier Books, Macmillan Publishing Company, New York.

GEBARA, IVONE (2002) Out of the Depths, Translated by Ann Patrick Ware, Minneapolis, Fortress Press.VERMEER, PAUL (1999) Learning Theodicy, Leiden, Brill.

VERMEER, PAUL(1999) Learning Theodicy, Leiden,Brill.
YOUNG, FRANCIS (1999) ‘Suffering’, in Alan Richardson and John Bowden (eds.), A New Dictionary of Christian Theology, Kent, SCM Press Ltd.


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