
In part 1 of this series, I highlighted how the problem of evil is probably the single greatest challenge to the idea that the Creator of all things could be (as Christians would have it) simultaneously all-knowing (omniscient), all-powerful (omnipotent), and all-good (omnibenevolent). The only solution to God allowing evil in this world at all is that he must have plans to not only conquer all evil, but to transform it into a good which, by comparison, is inconceivably better than the evil was bad. And crucially, this he would do in a total way, for all things, rescuing and restoring and redeeming and recreating everything (restitutio omnium) which had been touched by evil, or else one or all of his “omni” characteristics would be false. According to the logic of the very nature of God, he would want to save all because he loves all, would know how to save all because he knows all, and would have the power to save all because he is ‘all-mighty.’ After all, what could stop the power of God?
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