One of the greatest philosophical battles of all time centers on the belief in a good and just God in the context of all the evil that exists in this world. In every day life, this problem manifests itself in questions like "Why does God allow bad things to happen to good people?" or "Why does God hate me?" Thousands of philosophers, theists, believers, atheists and everyday folk have argued over this question for as long as man has doubted the belief in a higher power. Most of the arguments for God center on a belief in free will or that God allows evil to exist because without evil good could not exist. Other arguments deny a belief in true evil or say that perhaps God is not able to create a world where no evil existed. While I tend to support the Free Will defense, I have decided that I believe in an alternative view. Perhaps its not evil that matters so much, but rather our reaction to it.
The
power that evil possesses is a product of the fear that we as humans exhibit.
When we rise above the fear, evil loses its power. That’s not to discount pain,
and suffering, anguish, and grief, agony, and sorrow, because surely these
things exist. We have all experienced them in one way or another. But rather the
point is to recognize that these feelings are simply emotions and tactile
reactions to a hostile world. When we remember that, they can be endured,
overcome. We can rise above the pain. We are strengthened, lifted up. We can
fly free, even in captivity. When we reach the point that we can exhibit selfless,
celestial grace unfeigned, when we can forgive without thought to retribution,
revenge or compensation, when we can let go of our hatred and our selfish,
misguided sense of justice, when we can exhibit the tender mercy of God through
our every thought and action, then evil ceases to matter and the battle is won.
I think that’s the point that most people in this debate miss. Evil is not an end in itself, but rather a challenge to
be overcome.
Saturday, March 30, 2013
Tuesday, March 26, 2013
A Thought on Attitude
Each of us will face difficulties in our life. We will have trials and obstacles to overcome. We will experience defeat and we will suffer and bleed and eventually die. We will feel pain and sadness, misery and sorrow. We will lose loved ones and experience loss and grief. Very few of us are immune to the evils of this world, but as certain as I am that we will face these challenges, I am equally as certain that we are naturally endowed with the strength to overcome them. One of the tools that we are provided with for this task is the ability to control our attitude and how we react to whatever life throws at us.
“We
who lived in the concentration camps can remember the men who walked through
the huts comforting others, giving away their last piece of bread. They may
have been few in number, but they offer sufficient proof that everything can be
taken from a man but one thing: The last of his freedoms – to choose one’s
attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s own way.”
Sunday, March 24, 2013
A Thought on Wishes
I was recently discussing future
plans with a friend and I made the comment: “I wish.” She said “Nope, it's not a wish or
it always will be. It's got to be a plan.” While I think there’s some truth to
that statement, I think she misunderstood my definition of a wish. A lot of
people say “I wish…” sarcastically, as a remark when the possibility of
accomplishing whatever task they are talking about is so remote, that it is out
of the likelihood of possibility. But I disagree. I think that a wish is a hope
for something better and there is a quiet power in that kind of hope. That kind
of power is within all of us. It enables us to perform miracles and overcome
difficult circumstances to accomplish our hopes and dreams. When we tap into
it, we are strengthened and uplifted. It helps us to reach our greatest
potential.
In a famous
Disney song, it is said that “a dream is a wish your heart makes.” Could you
think of a more honest and intimate manifestation of our desires? On the
outside, we censor ourselves. We deny ourselves happiness. But when we hope,
dream, and wish, we open ourselves to our truest, rawest, and deepest selves. We
open ourselves to the possibility of finding true happiness. And that is a
beautiful thing. So go wish on a star, or cast a penny into the water. Take the
chance of changing your outlook. You never know what dreams might come true.
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