Leibniz vs. Voltaire: Can an Omnipotent, All-Benevolent God be Reconciled with this World of Suffering?

February 25, 2011 at 4:01 pm 9 comments

Candide VoltaireA few days ago, I wrote a post about the German mathematician and philosopher Gottfried Leibniz, but one important point I did not mention is his theodicy. Leibniz firmly believed that this world of ours was “the best of all possible worlds,” because an all-powerful, all-benevolent God would never create the second or third best possible world. He would choose the best of all possible worlds.

Shortly after reading Leibniz, I also re-read Voltaire’s philosophical novella Candide. One of the characters in the story is Doctor Pangloss, who is a Leibnizian philosopher that keeps preaching the doctrine of the “best of all possible worlds” even in the face of the most outrageous suffering. Through his sometimes quite funny parody, Voltaire sharply criticizes Leibniz. If this is the best possible world, he wants to know, then what do the other worlds look like?

Another thinker who criticized theodicy was Immanuel Kant. He thought that all philosophical attempts at a theodicy had failed, and I tend to agree with him. The only theodicy that I find at all tenable is not a philosophical one but simply the cross of Christ. This is a cautious Christian approach to suffering, admitting that ultimately we do not understand it. We might never know why God lets us suffer so much, but we know one thing: If there was any way around it, God Himself would not have come to suffer. Since He did, since He suffered indescribably and even died, the picture has changed. He has taken His own medicine, so to speak, and therefore we can trust Him.

The cross of Christ is thus the only credible theodicy. One cannot argue with a martyr. And if God Himself is a martyr, well, then there is no arguing with Him, is there?

Of course, you actually have to believe in the incarnation of Christ to be convinced by this. But it shows how someone who believes in God can find in the picture of the suffering God a solution to the problem of theodicy—not a solution that answers all intellectual questions, but one that satisfies on a more emotional level. And I would suggest that the main problem people have with theodicy is an emotional one, not a purely intellectual one.

Beyond this picture of the suffering God, a traditional theodicy has been the story of the Fall. In that view, the world was utterly perfect until we humans messed it up. It’s all our fault, including earthquakes and diseases and itching noses. God, in his infinite grace, is in the process of restoring the world, and he paid the ultimate price for it. So what are we complaining about?

Nowadays, this line of thinking can only be maintained by Young-Earth Creationists, that is, by people who believe that God created the world a few thousand years ago and that all modern scientific views on the age of the earth and of life on earth are completely wrong. Even most Intelligent-Design (ID) advocates affirm that the earth was formed about 4.6 billion years ago, that during the Cambrian period more than 500 million years ago invertebrates spread widely in the oceans, trilobites became common, and the first mollusks appeared. ID advocates generally embrace the earth’s history as now understood, from the Precambrian to the Cenozoic, including dinosaurs and all. Consequently, they also believe that death, pain, and discord existed in the world long before humans came into existence.

This, so to speak, throws the ball of the problem back in God’s court. We are not to blame for the basic fact of suffering after all. “Why, God, did you create a world of discord, pain, and death—not just for us humans, but long before we ever appeared on the scene?” This is the new question of theodicy that modern science has pressed on the theist.

The traditional answer that this earth is a kind of training ground for better things to come is hard to believe in light of earth’s long and long-suffering history. If one were to hunt for answers to theodicy in the Book of Revelation, for instance, this is one of the answers you would get (in addition to the more important “answer” of the Lamb of God, the suffering divinity nailed to a cross, which is probably the most central aspect of Revelation).

In Revelation 8 and 9, there are seven angels blowing seven trumpets, and at each blast of a trumpet a horrible disaster befalls the earth: natural catastrophes, pollution of oceans, shipwrecks, contamination of drinking water, harmful changes in the atmosphere, demonic attacks, yes, even Satan himself wreaking destruction. And then it says in chapter 9,20-21: “The rest of humankind, who were not killed by these plagues, did not repent of the works of their hands or give up worshipping demons and idols of gold and silver and bronze and stone and wood, which cannot see or hear or walk. And they did not repent of their murders or their sorceries or their fornication or their thefts.”

Now I want to stress that Revelation was an “occasional” letter, meaning it was written for a specific occasion of real people that the author believed were either undergoing terrible suffering or were about to undergo terrible suffering. It is not a philosophical treatise or an intellectual answer to the problems of theodicy. But were one to approach the text in this way, it would suggest that people suffer because God wants to warn them of even greater suffering to come. It is His way of pouring cold water on the heads of sinners and waking them from their spiritual slumber.

Proclaiming this pain-stricken earth to be God’s training ground for eternity, however, has mostly failed to bring the skeptic to his knees. Instead, it has caused outrage or at least a lively discussion on why such an idea is problematic.

The first problem is that it completely ignores non-human suffering. Is the deer expected to repent of its sins when chased by a lion? And is a torn deer supposed to serve as a warning to its comrades that eternal torment is awaiting the unbelieving deer soul? Hardly. No verse in the Bible promises eternal life to animals. Why then, from a purely theological perspective, do they need to suffer? Evolution does provide a sensible biological answer here, but not Revelation.

Second, there are ethical limitations on how much suffering one can inflict for a future good. If I see a group of people approaching a mine field and find myself in the position to warn them, am I justified to issue my warning by mowing down half of them with a machine gun and maiming the rest? Is there any court in the world that would sanction my action? And what are the many diseases, epidemics, earthquakes, floods, and storms but a constant killing and maiming of earthly life?

Third, suffering as a way of steering people away from future suffering only makes sense when they know the good that will come of it. Unless you tell a child that a vaccination will prevent disease, it is hardly going to turn its naked shoulder to the pointy needle. Granted, you sometimes have to force someone into their own good, such as with a baby or a mentally handicapped person. But with them you are not aiming at voluntary submission, which is what Revelation is aiming at.

To take a different example, every soldier-to-be knows the purpose of recruit training. He can therefore interpret its hardships in the right light, knowing that they are necessary for his successful career as a soldier. Applying this to humanity as a whole, one can imagine all people being born in another sphere where God instructs them about His purpose for their eternal lives, before sending them to this earth as a temporary training ground. If this were the case, life on earth would still be a test so hard as to border on cruelty, but at least people knew what they were in for. As it is, however, we are born on this earth and know no other. Different people say different things about the purpose of our planet. There is little agreement on whether this is a boot camp for something better or as good as it gets. And as long as there is still any disagreement on why we are here, Revelation’s take on suffering falls flat.

Forth and last, Revelation itself admits that the whole scheme simply does not work. A minority starts believing in God because of their suffering, yes. But only a minority. For many people, it was not only the Jews and gypsies who died in the Holocaust, but God, too.

Let me reiterate that a more cautious Christian approach to suffering is to admit that ultimately we do not understand it. But in the cross of Christ a believer can see a God who has taken His own medicine and is therefore trustworthy. This can be a comfort to believers, but probably is not something that would convince a skeptic.

Either way, I am with Voltaire not to gloss over the suffering in this world. It is real, and as human beings we all sit in the same boat—on the same Titanic, one could say. Let me close this all-too long post therefore with an excerpt from a poem that Voltaire wrote after the disastrous Lisbon earthquake, an earthquake that, one can argue, had a huge impact on European discussions of theodicy:

Horror on horrors, griefs on griefs must show,
That man’s the victim of unceasing woe,
And lamentations which inspire my strain,
Prove that philosophy is false and vain,
Approach in crowds and meditate awhile
You shattered walls, and view each ruined pile,
Women and children heaped up mountain high,
Limbs crushed which under ponderous marble lie;
Wretches unnumbered in the pangs of death,
Who mangled, torn, and panting for their breath,
Buried beneath their sinking roofs expire,
And end their wretched lives in torments dire,
Say, when you hear their piteous, half-formed cries,
Or from their ashes see the smoke arise,
Say, will you then eternal laws maintain,
Which God to cruelties like these constrain? …
But when like us Fate’s rigors you have felt,
Become humane, like us you’ll learn to melt,
When the earth gapes my body to entomb,
I justly may complain of such a doom.

- Translated by Tobias Smollett (1721-1771)

Entry filed under: Critique of Religion, Philosophy, Revelation. Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , .

Made It Through the First Round of the Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award! Rousseau’s Letter to Voltaire: Defending Leibniz and God’s Providence

9 Comments Add your own

  • 1. Ed Babinski  |  March 1, 2011 at 6:10 pm

    “God as martyr” is unconvincing since everything dies, we share our suffering with worms as much as we do with “God.”

    And if the tapeworm was created to “teach” us something then why do deer and other animals suffer from tapeworms?

    Charles Williams wrote disparagingly about attempts to apologize for suffering or create theodicies, including disparagingy his friend, Lewis’ attempt to do so. He noted that Job’s friends tried to explain reasons for suffering to Job, and that God in the end was less pleased by the reasons give by Job’s friends than by Job’s complaints.

  • 2. jacobschriftman  |  March 1, 2011 at 6:41 pm

    Thanks for your comment, Ed, though I’m not sure you’ve actually read the whole (admittedly rather long) post. Or have you? As I write there, the picture of the suffering God is not a philosophical argument for theodicy nor something to convince skeptics, but an emotional comfort to believers.
    I’m also not quite sure I follow the reasoning of your first sentence.
    As an aside, I think current science does not support the idea that worms feel pain; their brains are not developed enough for a subjective experience of pain. I know your main point is not about worms as such, but knowing that you value scientific accuracy, I thought I should mention it. Or am I misinformed on this point?

  • 3. jacobschriftman  |  March 1, 2011 at 6:56 pm

    I guess what you are getting at is the problem of animal pain, and I think it really is a serious problem for theodicy. If I may draw your attention to what I wrote in the post about the idea that suffering is supposed to teach people a spiritual lesson:
    “The first problem is that it completely ignores non-human suffering. Is the deer expected to repent of its sins when chased by a lion? And is a torn deer supposed to serve as a warning to its comrades that eternal torment is awaiting the unbelieving deer soul? Hardly. No verse in the Bible promises eternal life to animals. Why then, from a purely theological perspective, do they need to suffer? Evolution does provide a sensible biological answer here, but not Revelation.”

  • 4. Jay  |  March 2, 2011 at 11:49 am

    Maybe this world is a still a good world after all (though not the best), as it gives a context where question such a justice can arise. It also give the context where relationship and love can be build between two people.
    We might not be able to explain suffering, but it seems that Jesus, when speaking about some tower that fall and killed some people, reminded the disciple that shits happens and what they need to do is to trust God.
    So, again, this world, who gives the context for someone to trust God, still have some good in the midst of suffering. And the rest does remain a mystery.

  • 5. Ed Babinski  |  March 2, 2011 at 10:28 pm

    Jacob, I especially agree with you that your paragraph on the deer suffering for its “sins” is most poignant and challenging.

    Speaking of which, have you read the poem Chipmunk Crucifixion?

    No chipmunk had to be crucified
    on a tiny cross of twigs
    To save all the other chippies,
    Had to have nails pounded
    through his little paws,
    Had to take upon himself
    all the sins of all the chippies
    that ever were or would be
    and die in agony
    So that after they died
    all the chippies
    could live again forever,
    But only if they believed
    in all the sayings and doings
    of the chipmunk crucified
    on the tiny cross of twigs.

    - Antler, Last Words

    Also my larger point was that the idea of a God who martyrs himself doesn’t necessarily bring comfort. It’s a pretty hideous conception in fact, and irrational and unappealing in many ways. Though we both agree some people revel in the blood of the cross, and drinking “wine-blood” every Sunday.

    Another aspect of having God “die for us,” is how important that makes “us” in the scheme of things. Pretty damn self-centered. As if an infinite being has to torture himself for “our” sake instead of simply willing things differently, directly forgiving people, or punching a pillow to take out His “righteous jealous anger.” There’s a Bible verse about how God became “sin” for us, causing a rift in the Godhead itself, since God cannot abide “sin.” So God keeps punching Himself in the jaw until He can forgive anyone anything. It sounds more to me like primate rage evolved into a God story.

    I think the only comforting idea, at least in the western world, is that our “selves” along with our “memories” continue after we die. Though some eastern religions might demure since they think the “self” is an illusion because the only true truth is eternal and unchanging, but life is fraught with change and imperfection. Hence they imagine that drawing nearer to eternal truth does not involve maintaining one’s “self” and “memories.”

    As for the suffering of worms, I agree, its nervous system is so slight what could it perceive or know of pain? I seem to recall that they squirm wildly when drowning or crushed, and if you tap the ground a certain way resembling the presence of an underground predator, worms will rush to the surface. No animal it appears, likes to get killed, not that the worm is conscious of its reactions.

    But again, my point was not worms per se, but the ubiquity of suffering itself. From suffering and dying worms to suffering and dying humans, to a suffering and dying God-men. All life suffers and dies. It doesn’t make suffering and dying any more comforting knowing everything does it. I believe it was Henry Huxley who used the illustration of worms and humans both dying. And it’s Christian theologians who use the idea of humans and God both dying. But neither idea truly relieves one’s concern over one’s mortality.

    Lastly, what about evolution and suffering?

    “The evolutionary process is not at all a perfect one and many traits created by it are not even adaptive. It is precisely because of this that we suffer from such unadaptive traits as back pain, fallen arches, impacted wisdom teeth, varicose veins, appendicitis, cystic fibrosis, sickle-cell anemia, Huntington’s disease, schizophrenia, manic-depression, alcoholism, painful childbirth, and a host of other maladies which genetic evolution has created, but which natural selection has done nothing to eliminate.

    “Moreover, each evolutionary change tends to bring with it new forms of pain and suffering that had not existed before…

    “For example, sexuality is not absolutely superior to asexuality, and the evolution of the former has brought with it many forms of conflict and suffering that do not exist in organisms that reproduce without sex…

    “Sociality is not absolutely superior to solitary life, and its evolution has created new forms of competition and conflict that are less frequent, or even unknown among asocial animals…

    “Bipedalism [walking on two legs] is by no means absolutely superior to quadrupedalism [walking on four], and the evolution of a two-legged gait in Homo sapiens has brought with it countless adverse side effects…

    “Intelligence and behavioral flexibility are by no means absolutely superior to instinctive behavior, and their evolution had brought with it many forms of [intellectual angst and] emotional pain that are virtually unknown in the nonhuman world…

    “No animal has undergone more major changes during the course of its evolution than Homo Sapiens, and no animal has inherited a greater capacity for pain and suffering. With every evolutionary change we have sustained, we have discovered new ways to protect our genes and new ways to suffer for their benefit. With every passing generation, the aggregate price paid for their preservation has become dearer and dearer. And our genes – unlike us – remain blissfully ignorant of the staggering mass of suffering that has been endured for the sake of their perpetuation.”

    TIMOTHY ANDERS IN “THE ROOTS OF EVIL,” A SUB-SECTION IN THE EVOLUTION OF EVIL: AN INQUIRY INTO THE ULTIMATE ORIGINS OF HUMAN SUFFERING

  • 6. Ron  |  March 14, 2011 at 9:50 pm

    Maybe we cannot find the answer to the question because enlightenment about suffering isn´t going to help us. Maybe, we are incapable of understanding the answer.

  • 7. Chris Fuchser  |  August 22, 2011 at 4:17 pm

    “Can an Omnipotent, All-Benevolent God be Reconciled with this World of Suffering?”

    In my opinion, only if Genesis is literal. In that case, a created being made with a free-will must be able to obtain the consequences of its decisions. God did everything he could to prevent the wrong decision: He clearly explained the choice to his creation. He clearly explained the consequences that would occur from making the wrong choice (“On the day you eat of it, dying you shall die”.) And he clearly gave enough other choices so that idle curiosity or boredom weren’t a factor (“You may eat of ANY tree of the garden except one”). The Genesis account is clear that Eve did not take the forbidden fruit out of curiosity or boredom. She was presented with a challenge (which her pristine, fully-engaged mind would readily have recognized), and that challenge clearly would have led her to the logical conclusion, “either this snake is lying to me, or God is lying to me.” So who did she choose to distrust? God or the snake? The temptation was fair, in that it purely tested her faith in God only, and didn’t prey upon an inherent weakness or design flaw. Squared face to face with the idea that God may not be trustworthy, she embraced that idea rather than choosing to believe the best about God and that the snake was the untrustworthy one. And then, as a result of that decision, the curse fell upon mankind, and Adam and Eve’s decision to distrust God became a weakness that their descendants have inherited as part of the curse. I describe this to show that it doesn’t take much explanation from the Genesis account to de-couple God from the supposed blame that most thinking on this subject tend to ascribe to him. God isn’t to blame for mankind’s fall, nor for the world of suffering that resulted. If God had given Adam and Eve a good result for their disobedience, then they wouldn’t have really been free to choose good or evil. When you get the same thing no matter what you decide, then there was never really a choice to be had. So is the suffering our fault or God’s? We can’t have it both ways – you can’t have both free choice AND ascribe to God all culpability for the consequences of making a wrong choice.

    Incidentally, I don’t know where “all-benevolent” idea came from. “All-…” implies the exclusion of everything to the contrary. The Bible describes a God who is more than one-sided. Yes, he is loving, more so than any human being, but the Bible also describes that God has a big problem with our lack of faith and of our lack of holiness. He hates it so much, that he sent Jesus to pay the penalty. And even Jesus frequently showed disappointment with his disciples. At how slow they were to “get it”. He would sigh at them. He would say, “are you so dull?”. Since Jesus was the fullness of the deity (Godhead) represented in human form, then we must take Jesus’ words as an extension of what God the Father feels. When Jesus was expressing frustration, that was God expressing frustration. The Bible says that every one of us will be called to account for the deeds we have done, so in my mind that contradicts with the post-modern idea of a fluffy pink bunny “all-loving” “all merciful” God who does nothing but sit in the theological box we have confined him to, and then we take him out and hold him in front of others and pet his soft fur and say, “God loves you and has a wonderful plan for your life.” Somehow, that’s not “the whole truth and nothing but the truth.” The Bible says “God is a consuming fire.” And “who can stand before him?” He’s not a sugar daddy in the sky. And unfortunately, he’s been presented as such that the view of God presented is incompatible with a “world of suffering”. Even the word “omnipotent” is a man-made word made up to summarize God and put him in a theological box. God never uses this word when he describes himself in the Biblical text. So why do we presume upon God to think we can better describe him than he can? Why do we believe our man-made creeds over what God himself has revealed about who he is?

    So I conclude that it’s a man-made construct to pit an “omnipotent, all-benevolent God” against anything, because the Bible doesn’t describe an “omnipotent, all-benevolent God”. Instead it describes a God for whom nothing is too difficult (which is different than omnipotent, when you deeply consider it), who is both benevolent and full of vengeance. He will reward the righteous and destroy the wicked. Somehow, I can’t see the cotton candy poofy “all-benevolent” God destroying the wicked. Maybe that’s why there are homosexual ministers in the church today, who say that God will overlook it. Maybe that’s why we can “pray for others” by revealing all their dirty secrets and not call it slander (the Bible lumps slander and homosexuality into the same pot, by the way. Neither one is more egregious nor less egregious than the other.).

    OK, enough said. Just wanted to communicate that the question is slanted, because it tends to pit an imaginary, non-Biblical God against the world of suffering. I find no conflict with the Biblical (non-theologized) God and the world of suffering. I find that the book of Genesis, taken literally, actually answers all my objections. Even though it’s a difficult lesson to learn (to understand and take ownership that our rebellion is responsible for our own mess).

  • 8. Ed Babinski  |  August 27, 2011 at 3:10 am

    @Chris Fuchser, You have obviously studied more theology than science. Evangelicals today do not simply take the reality of an historical Adam and Eve for granted, it’s hotly debated, per a cover story of Christianity Today this year, and per incidents mentioned in The Chronicle of Higher Ed. and on NPR, and on the BIOLOGOS website where Christians (theologians and scientists) are proevolution and debate their fellow Christians. Meanwhile in the scientific world at large there is no debate. The opening of the wealth of info from the human genome project and other genome projects has chimed the death of a literal Adam and Eve.

    And theologically speaking. . .

    The story of the fall of man in Genesis seems originally to have been one of the sardonic folk tales of the Near East that explain how man once had immortality nearly within his grasp, but was cheated out of it by frightened or malicious deities [i.e., Adam and Eve were hustled from the garden by such deities before they could eat of the “fruit of the tree of life” and “live forever” like them]. We have earlier versions from Sumerian times on that are less rationalized than the one in Genesis…The Genesis account permits itself a verse (3:22) in which God seems to be telling other gods that man (after eating of the “fruit of the tree of knowledge”) is “now one of us,” in a position to threaten their power unless they do something about it at once, with a break in the syntax that suggests genuine terror.

    Northrop Frye, The Great Code: The Bible and Literature
    ____________________________

    Genesis (chapters two and three) depicts Adam and Eve being hustled from the garden by a frightened or indignant deity after they have tasted the fruit of the tree of knowledge “and become like one of us” (like “gods,” or like “God,” depending on your translation). Better evict them before they also take a bite out of “the fruit of the tree of eternal life,” and become even more like gods.

    Such myths were invented to explain why man was superior to the animals in having god-like knowledge and amazing creative abilities like speech, yet still suffered the ignominy of death along with all the other animals. Hence, myths arose about man being cheated out of the other god-like quality he wished he had along with his intelligence, namely eternal life.

    Speaking of “god-like” qualities, Genesis plainly states, as many theologians have pointed out, that man was created in God’s physical image. Some verses make this connection abundantly clear: “When God created man, He made him in the likeness of God…[And then when] Adam became the father of a son [it was] in his own likeness, according to his image.” (Gen. 5:1,3)

    Ancient peoples even spread fables about how the gods found human females “beautiful”–nearly as beautiful as the gods themselves were depicted as being. Such fables are echoed in Genesis 6:2: “And it came to pass, when men began to multiply on the face of the earth, and daughters were born unto them, That the sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair; and they took them wives of all which they chose.” In short, the ancient Hebrews believed that humanity was made in the physical image of “God,” even in an image that the “sons of God” found irresistibly attractive. In a similar fashion the ancient Greeks believed that they bore a physical resemblance to their gods, Zeus, Apollo, etc.

    Speaking of the Hebrew Lord resembling Zeus, both the Hebrew Lord and Zeus liked to “cover their hands with the lightnings” and “restrain” or “loose” it; and the roar of thunder was viewed as their “voice.” (See such examples by looking up the word “lightning” in the book of Job.)Moreover, nothing pleased both their noses better than the aroma of flaming sacrificial livestock. As it says in the Bible, “…the Lord smelled the soothing aroma.” (Gen. 8:21; Ex. 29:18; Lev. 1:17, 3:5; Num. 15:13,24; 29:28)

  • 9. Zoroaster  |  November 4, 2011 at 3:05 am

    Here let me help you with this problem. Leibniz, in his Theodicy, says that God is all-knowing, all-perfect, and all-benovelent. Strictly speaking, his account is not to say to blindy accept optimism in light of all of the suffering in our world. Partly, he wants to show that simple substances in nature exist in a universe that contains an infinite amount of simple beings. Voltaire agrees in part with what Leibniz says in the Theodicy. It goes something like this ‘everything is arranged, everything is ordered, according to the laws of moving bodies.’ This is from the passage ‘Well Everything is Well’ by Voltaire. Leibniz is not necessarily saying to accept the world for what it is. He wants to demonstrate that the flaw of man is not something you can take for nature to be the blame. Leibniz emphasizes that their is a pre-existing harmony in the universe. The capacity to reason is likened to a gift given by God to man. If it was not for reason, would man then just be an animal that is not free to deliberate about an intellectual and spiritual choice to be an individual? Without reason, what grounds is their to say that God gave us a free-choice to be this or not to be this? Would it contradict God’s goodness to give a gift to some creature and then leave them unto their own doing with what to do with that gift? Is that not a demonstration that God permits free-choice as a sign of his perfection? Imperfection is nothing except the acknowledgement that their is some kind of greater perfection that is not yet realized. The greater perfection is always possible and not limited in any way. How would this in anyway contradict their being a god in the universe?

    -Zoroaster

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s

Trackback this post  |  Subscribe to the comments via RSS Feed


Feeds

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 56 other followers

Categories

Recent Posts

Archives

 

February 2011
M T W T F S S
« Jan   Mar »
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28  

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 56 other followers