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The Problem of Evil
Anti-Theodicy: Is Theodicy Itself
Evil?
Barry Whitney ©
Several recent books
advocate an anti-theodicy protest as an alternative to
traditional theodicies, indeed to the entire enterprise
of theodicy as the seeking of rational justification
for reconciling belief in God and the world's immense
suffering and injustice. A fairly recent book by Sarah
Pinnock is an example. This book, Beyond Theodicy (State
U of New York P, 2002), focuses on continental existential
and political Jewish and Christian writers, all of whom
advocate practical responses to sufferings rather than
seeking to explain or justify God's reasons for causing
or permitting suffering in "theodicies." Pinnock discusses
also some of the "contextual" theologies which Pinnock
regards as extentions of the aforementioned existential
and political responses.
The strength of
the book is its informative exposition and analysis of
some of the main responses to the Holocaust in major
representatives of Jewish and Christian thinkers--the
existential responses of Gabriel Marcel and Martin Buber,
the political responses of Ernst Block and Jürgen
Moltmann, the "theodicy-sensitive" response of Johann
Baptist Metz, and the work of "contextual" writers who
reject conceptual or propositional theology in favour
of the view that all theological language is situated
in particular historical circumstances. Included in this
group are post-holocaust, liberation, feminist, womanist,
mujerista, African-American, and Latin American writers,
all of whom seek to bring the existential and political
approaches
"into conversation."
All of these practical
responses eschew theodicy, as does Pinnock, despite admitting
that there are problems internal to these responses,
that they are at odds with one another in various ways
and, indeed, "do not provide adequate practical alternatives" to
theodicy. One of the main merits of these alternatives,
nonetheless, according to Pinnock, is that they "explore
objections to theodicy." The "contextual" approaches
to suffering in particular, she claims, promise to provide
more adequate responses to evil and suffering "without
theodicy comfort," responses which take on seemingly
endless configurations "appropriate to different religious
communities."
The weakness of
this book is its repetitive and cavalier dismissal of
traditional theodicies, all of which Pinnock (wrongly)
implies are modeled on those of Leibniz and Hegel, a
model which prompts Pinnock's condemnation of theodicy
as intolerant and irrelevant to individual instances
of suffering. In response, I would point out that rational
reflection on God and suffering can be distinguished
from the Leibnizian-Hegelian formal theodicies (which
are emulated by very few contemporary theodicies). Rational
reflection is essential to the enterprize of theology,
of course, an enterprise we can only assume Pinnock is
not rejecting entirely. It is not clear this is the case,
however, since she seems to confuse "theodicy" with rational
reflection about God and suffering and condemns as arrogant
all such intellectual musings, claiming that they produce
nothing but detached theoretical speculations, irrelevant
to living faith and to suffering individuals in their
unique and personal contexts. Pinnock's position implies
this absurdity, contending that theodicies -- and presumably
all theological reflections on God and evil? -- are epistemologically
absurd (Kant), "morally scandalous," and "harmful," insofar
as they "condone evils by ignoring their social dimensions."
While there is obvious
merit in and need for practical, personal responses to
suffering by means of various coping strategies, the
author's claim that this is all that can be done in response
to evils and suffering should cause us pause. Surely
this is not an either/or choice. Nor is there convincing
evidence in this book or elsewhere to support such a
radical position. As such, I see no reason to follow
Pinnock's "advice"
to jettison "theocentric" theodicies and replace them with "anthopocentric"
practical responses. The author seems unaware that her view
of theodicy is a caricature: theodicies are hardly the arrogant,
abstract justifications of all evils as part of God's plan,
irrelevant to the individual sufferer. Theodicies, rather,
are legitimate and necessary rational theological reflections
on suffering and its relationship to God. Such reflections
are far more humble and tentative in their claims than the
author's caricature suggests. The theodicists, moreover,
who devote large portions of their personal and academic
lives in pursuit of this major theological and practical
problem are hardly the indifferent and irrelevant gamesters
that the author suggests. Neither are they engaged in an
immoral activity, in "amoral . . . rationalistic caricatures
of practical faith struggles." Is the author aware of the
seriousness of this charge, the implications for the enterprize
of theology as a discipline of rational reflection, and the
lack of evidence for her position?
Pinnock follows
closely the views of Surin, Tilley, Ricoeur and others
who represent a movement which rejects the grandious
Enlightenment theodicies of Leibniz and Hegel as particularly
objectionable. Such theodicies claimed to fully justify
evil and suffering in a cold-hearted, insensitive and
purely theoretical manner that is all-but-irrelevant
to individual sufferers in their particular situations.
Worse yet, they "effaced" the social causes of suffering
and render protest and other practical coping methods
meaningless. Yet, in my view, this condemnation assumes
that Leibnizian-Hegelian theodicy is the model of contemporary
theodicies. I hardly think it is. Theodicies are theological
reflections which make no claims to rationalistic definitiveness.
Indeed, unlike many of the practical responses advocated
by Pinnock, rational reflection about God and suffering
is based largely on interpretations of biblical texts.
It is a serious matter to advocate otherwise in a quest
for practical responses. Jewish reflection on the Holocaust,
I would add, have not been restricted to practical responses
in the handful of anti-theodicies but, rather, have engaged
in a wide variety of theological reflection, none claiming
absolute certainty nor callously ignoring the victims
of suffering. Nor do they render a vast theocentric scheme
of justifying God's ways to us, a scheme which renders
irrelevant the suffering victim.
One could be
unkind and reflect back on anti-theodicists the very
accusation they levy against theodicists, namely, that
anti-theodcy contributes to evil and suffering by its
recommendations as to how to approach suffering. A
far better case can be made against anti-theodicy than
against theodicy as causing evil and suffering despite
trying to explain or alleviate it. Anti-theodicists
can justly be accused of denying explanations to the
sufferer who seeks not just consolation but explanation,
however humble and tentative the explanations may be.
Theodicists have the important task of seeking to eliminate
bad answers from good ones, for example, and those
of us who use a biblical basis (rather than a smorgasboard
of non-Christian resources) as our primary resource
seek to provide biblical Christian answers for Christian
sufferers. As a theodicist, I object to those who accuse
our long and dedicated work of a lifetime as being
insensitive, morally repulsive and irrelevant to the
sufferer. It is hard not to draw the conclusion that
anti-theodicists (like Pinnock, whose book led me to
write this response) seek to supersede theology with
practice, while claiming apparently that they are working
within the Christian framework. Such a disregard for
biblical and theological tradition seems to me nothing
short of another step in the postmodernist rejection
of an absolute Truth in favour of pragmaticism (seek
what method works, regardless of whether or not it
is true). Theology, furthermore, cannot be disregarded
or suspended, even in pragmatic attempts to console
the sufferer. Theology is unavoidably implicit and
inescapable. The real question is how valid the theology
is. Part of its valuation is its correspondence with
biblical truth and part is its practical effects on
sufferers. And there are other considerations as well.
(I've elaborated and defended these and other related
points elsewhere.)
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This essay is based
on a review published in the Canadian journal, Studies
in Religion, 2003
Barry Whitney is Professor of Christian Theology/Philosophy
of Religion at the University
of Windsor, Windsor ON Canada. He is Editor of the journal,
Process Studies. His research has focused largely
on the problem of evil and issues in the Philosophy of
Religion.
© BARRY WHITNEY, 2005. Please request permission
from the author at whitney@uwindsor.ca to
use this publication in whole or in part in web publications
or in other forms of publication and dissemination.
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