dfnj
Well-Known Member
This is what we call 'The Problem of Theodicy' from a theologian and Jewish perspective. However, I don't believe in free will. I do believe in destiny which is the opposite. Therefore, it solves this issue of 'evil' and 'bad' in the world because everything happens for a reason. It only makes sense this way to me. I don't think God shares the same concept of human morality so when we say something is 'good' or 'bad' it's entirely based on our perception of things. If it's God's plan for something 'good' or 'bad' to happen at a certain time it will happen to bring about some result which would be a part of His ultimate plan in the end for you and everyone else whether it directly or indirectly affects you.
To say God does not intervene, however, is subjective. Some people say he surely intervenes and some say it's impossible. For example, someone prayed a million times for a specific outcome to happen in their life only to be met with dead silence while someone else says I prayed once and the next day they got what they prayed for. I can only say for the first scenario is that such a person was not meant to have their prayer answered for a reason that they cannot understand at that time. But there's a reason for it.
So when something happens by coincidence it's God intervening. And when something doesn't happen it's God choosing his long term plan for "reason that they cannot understand." Claiming something is the result of God's action is just a subjective judgment. Everything about God only occurs in mind space and imaginations.