
About an hour north of my home, Highway 97 snakes along for roughly 20 km
between rock cliffs and
Whenever I
drive that road, I seem to end up behind somebody's recreational vehicle,
wallowing along at 10 km/hr under the speed limit.
Each time
this happens, I find myself wondering: "Why do I always get trapped behind
a slow-moving RV where I can't pass it?"
Then I
realized that my question already contained its answer. If I were on a road
where I could pass that RV, I wouldn't be trapped behind it. I probably
wouldn't even be aware of it, because it wouldn't impede my progress.
As I waited
for an opportunity to pass, I started thinking about other questions that
contain their own answer.
Like the
time our daughter Sharon came home from high school complaining that she had
had a rotten day. "Why is it," she demanded, "that the teachers
are always in a lousy mood whenever I haven't had enough sleep the night
before?"
Joan and I
burst into unsympathetic laughter.
Another
example might be the question that thoughtful people have asked from time
immemorial - if God is good, and God created everything, how can there be evil
in the world? Did a good God create evil?
The academic
name for this question, by the way, is "theodicy."
Don't weasel
on that question and object that God didn't create evil - humans did.
As a
parallel, consider the National Rifle Association's mantra: "Guns don't
kill people; people kill people." Tragically, they're right - guns don't
kill people, bullets do. But neither guns nor bullets make themselves. If some
people didn't make guns, for other people to shoot bullets with, there would be
no gun-related killings.
To my mind,
that places responsibility on the makers of guns and bullets.
So if God
made humans capable of creating evil, God is still responsible.
But again,
the question contains its own answer. It assumes that God created everything.
If God didn't create everything, then God wouldn't be responsible for evil.
I can't
actually imagine any alternative to God as Creator. But that inability merely
confirms how deeply entrenched the concept is.
Many
scientists believe that the universe exploded into existence from nothing -
from a "singularity," which is as close to nothing as you can come,
because it has no measurements of any kind. No length, no mass, no time.
Religious
people contend that nothing can't become something.
Therefore something must have created the universe. Each religious culture has
its own name for that creative something - mine calls it "God."
But then
where did God come from? Out of nothing? Or can there be something, like God,
that never had a beginning? Something that has always
existed?
I find that
equally hard to imagine.
But perhaps
those questions would also contain their own answers, if I were smart enough to
figure out what they were.
If you have comments or questions about Jim's column, write to him directly at jimt@quixotic.ca
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Copyright © 2006 by Jim Taylor. Non-profit use in congregations and study groups permitted; all other rights reserved.