What is evil really?
Where does it come from?
And if God is really God, why doesn't he do more about it? This world is out of control-so violent, painful, unfair and destructive. Doesn't God care?
The Greek philosopher Epicurus is credited with saying:
Either God wants to abolish evil and cannot; or he can but does not want to; or he cannot and does not want to. If he wants to but cannot, he is impotent.If he can and does not want to, he is wicked. But if God both can and wants to abolish evil, then how comes evil in the world?
This is known as the Epicurean paradox. Obviously, mankind has been wrestling with the problem of evil for some time; Epicurus lived between 340-270 BC.
Fast-forward twenty-three hundred years. Eric Jennings is a freshman at the University of Florida. He and his older sister, Libby, have moved in from themission field to enter the premed program to become medical missionaries. Eric's roommate, Todd Rehnquist, though a baseball teammate and a good friend, isan atheist. And he poses the problem to Eric using an interesting quote. This sets in motion a conversation between Eric, Todd, Libby, Ray Cohen, theJennings' former science teacher, and Mike Murphy, a local youth minister and one of Eric's spiritual mentors. The conversation happens at an areabreakfast haunt, the Gator Skillet. Follow them as they wrestle with this most profound of issues and connect the dots. You'll find that the answers are assimple as they are surprising.
Preface Two Challenges
Chapter One It Always Begins with a Question
Chapter Two No Apologies Necessary
Chapter Three Inescapable
Chapter Four Alone
Chapter Five The Professor's Questions
Chapter Six The Tale of Two Timeframes
Chapter Seven Connecting the Dots
Postscript Where Do I Sign?
Appendix I: Exposing a Darwinian ls*