I know this thread is old, but there's a lot of mistaken assumptions here.
There is no "good" or "evil" dichotomy in the groups of Divine Beings in Germanic religion. The Jötnar are not "evil". They are analogous to the Greek Titans in that they are the primeval forces of the Cosmos and celestial bodies. For example, Jord is the Earth and She is certainly not "evil. She is our Mother. Some of the Jötnar were on friendly terms with the Gods and even had offspring with them, same as how some of the Titans were viewed positively to the Greeks. However, the Gods uphold order, balance and law and the Jötnar, as primal forces, would of course be in opposition to them as they are often chaotic. Eventually the Jötnar "win out" over the Gods because the universe is cyclic, going through phases of life, death and rebirth. They are just part of the innate workings of the cosmos, but the Gods try to hold this off in working to give everything the time needed. But after this universe comes to end, the process starts again. So Jötnar aren't "evil". Chaos and destruction and form and order cannot survive without each other, same as life and death. They are intrinsically linked.
So the dualistic mindset of those who set up the Gods and the Jötnar against each other is a foreign mindset that comes from Christianity. Both sides win and both sides lose at different parts in the eternal cycle. Everything is part of a whole and works together. Just as the present form and order of the universe won't last forever, neither will the chaos and destruction that ends it. Every ending is a door to a new beginning. Maybe trillions of years from now in a future universe, we'll be having this discussion again.
There is no "good" or "evil" dichotomy in the groups of Divine Beings in Germanic religion. The Jötnar are not "evil". They are analogous to the Greek Titans in that they are the primeval forces of the Cosmos and celestial bodies. For example, Jord is the Earth and She is certainly not "evil. She is our Mother. Some of the Jötnar were on friendly terms with the Gods and even had offspring with them, same as how some of the Titans were viewed positively to the Greeks. However, the Gods uphold order, balance and law and the Jötnar, as primal forces, would of course be in opposition to them as they are often chaotic. Eventually the Jötnar "win out" over the Gods because the universe is cyclic, going through phases of life, death and rebirth. They are just part of the innate workings of the cosmos, but the Gods try to hold this off in working to give everything the time needed. But after this universe comes to end, the process starts again. So Jötnar aren't "evil". Chaos and destruction and form and order cannot survive without each other, same as life and death. They are intrinsically linked.
So the dualistic mindset of those who set up the Gods and the Jötnar against each other is a foreign mindset that comes from Christianity. Both sides win and both sides lose at different parts in the eternal cycle. Everything is part of a whole and works together. Just as the present form and order of the universe won't last forever, neither will the chaos and destruction that ends it. Every ending is a door to a new beginning. Maybe trillions of years from now in a future universe, we'll be having this discussion again.