I’ve been
reading the Sidney Chambers mysteries by James Runcie, a series of books on an
Anglican vicar near Cambridge in the 1950s and 1960s that’s the basis for the
popular Grantchester mysteries on
PBS. While it’s not as apparent in the television shows, Runcie’s stories do
more than offer interesting mysteries with an engaging amateur detective. The
stories typically pose theological questions, as Chambers wrestles with faith,
doubt and the various issues that people of faith contend with.
I was reading Sidney Chambers and the
Problem of Evil (review next week) when a not terribly original thought
entered my head. We hear so much about the problem of evil. Why does (or would)
God allow evil? What do bad things happen to good people? Why does God allow a
small child to get cancer? Why earthquakes and tornadoes? Why Hitler and
Stalin? Why ISIS?
The not terribly
original thought was that perhaps we’re asking the wrong question. What if the
real question wasn’t about all the evil that God allows in the world, but all
the good? Why is there so much good in the world?
I went looking
for some answers.
A Presbyterian
pastor, D. Marion Clark, published The Problem of Good: When
the World Seems Fine Without God in 2014. A collection of essays by
different writers, it takes a different view than the one I’m pursuing. The
essays are more aimed at trying to explain why good seems to exist just fine
without God.
Amazon has that
one entry when you query “the problem of good.” Substitute “the problem of
evil,” and you get 100 pages of
entries. We Christians tend to be preoccupied with the question of evil,
because it that set of questions from non-Christians that are perplexing
without resorting to an in-depth lecture of the fall, original sin, marred
creation, and related topics.
Why is there so much good in the world?
I found an
answer that was intriguing because it went directly to a more basic issue: how
do we know the difference between good and evil? What is it that says something
is good, like helping the poor or sick, and something is bad, like gossip or
physically attacking a person?
Most of us would
focus on consequences or results – but bad things can often flow from good
intentions (and we need look no further than our own federal government for
untold numbers of examples).
Author and
Christian apologist Greg Koukl concisely addressed my question in a blog post
three years ago. We know the difference between good and evil because there
is a pre-existing moral standard. Even if we are the most ardent of atheists or
agnostics, we acknowledge that standard every time we raise the question of “why
evil?”
I didn’t expect
a mystery story to take me down a theological path, even a mystery story
involving a vicar, but it did. It also reminded me that G.K. Chesterton’s Father Brown Mysteries
did much the same thing when they were written beginning a century ago.
Some mystery
stories can possibly double as theological treatises.
Photograph by Petr Kratochvil via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
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