THE
PROBLEM OF EVIL AND JUDAEO-CHRISTIAN DEMONOLOGY
Reading: Norman Cohn, Chap 2 "Changing Views of the Devil"
I.
THE PHILOSOPHICAL "PROBLEM OF EVIL":
What is the source of evil, if God is good?
or: Why does a good God permit evil?
Polytheistic early religions: divine ambiguity (Hinduism)
Monotheistic religions: Judaism, Christianity, Islam
Question becomes "How can a good God permit evil?"
THEODICY: any systematic attempt to answer this question
Greek root: theos = god; dix =
justice
DUALISM as solution: dual, competing forces for good and evil;
God no longer single or omnipotent (i.e. not all powerful)
effect: limit Good God's power to protect his goodness
Zoroastrianism:
(Persia 6th
C. BC; founded by prophet Zarathustra)
AHRIMAN = personified evil, demonic force
II.
OLD TESTAMENT [OT]:
Judaic solutions to problem of evil
Early books of O.T.: Yahweh as ambivalent, does good & evil
Book of Amos (8th C. BC); II Isaiah (6th C. BC)
Emergence of Satan figure
Book of Job: Prologue (5th C. BC)Demonology: study of nature and powers of demons
III. NEW TESTAMENT [NT]: Early Christian
IDOLATRY:
Greek & Roman pagan religion seen as demon worshipChristianity as protective against demonic influence
BAPTISM: baptized Christians immune to power of evil
EXORCISM: NT ritual, drive demons from possessed person
Early Christian Exorcist saints:
St. Anthony: 3rd C. Egyptian Christian monk
Biography by St. Athanasius:
desert hermit battles demons
IV. CLASSICAL GREEK PHILOSOPHY
Greek religion: ambivalent gods -- e.g. Hades/Plouton
Hades (god of underworld) = same as Plouton (god of wealth)PLATO (5th C. BC): Elements of Platonic approach to evil
l. modified dualism: matter vs spirit
2. theory of ideas (idealism): ideas more real than matter
3. negative solution: ("Swiss cheese theory" of evil)
evil as privation or absence of good
4. Creator limited by pre-existing chaos (not all powerful)
V. EARLY CHRISTIAN THEORIES OF EVIL 4-5th C. AD
Important terms for Christian thought:
ORTHODOX = "correct doctrine;"
versus
HETERODOX = "different
doctrine"
HERESY = wrong doctrine
MANICHEAN HERESY:
dualist position, competing
forces for good & evil
condemned as Christian heresy because not monotheistic
ST. AUGUSTINE (354-430 AD):
early Christian bishop and theologian
Confessions -- autobiographical account of his conversion
l) Manichean phase (youthful error)
2) Neo-platonism: adopts view of evil
as privation of good
3) Christian elements:
God permits evil for his own purposes: to
a) punish
sin
b) test faith
(OT Book of Job: read
selection in class handout)
c) bring good out of evil