“what’s ragged should be left ragged”: god’s problem of evil smpt proposal 2012
TRANSCRIPT
“What’s Ragged Should Be Left Ragged”:
God’s Problem of Evil
Loyd Ericson
SMPT Proposal 2012
In his book The Problem of Evil and the Problem of God, D.Z. Phillips argues that the
problem of evil, as traditionally conceived by philosophers, critics, and apologists of religion, is
dependent upon conceptually and grammatically incoherent notions of God’s omnipotence,
omniscience, and omnibenevolence; and that Christian apologists such as Alvin Plantinga,
Stephen Davis, and others, while attempting to answer the problem, fail to recognize these
conceptual mistakes and ultimately attempt to devise theodicies and defenses that strip away the
complexities and puzzles of life that are an inherent part of what it means to be human.
In this paper, I will briefly highlight a few of the key points in Phillips’s argument and
then compare those to theodicies put forth by Latter-day Saint thinkers such as David Paulsen,
Blake Ostler, Truman Madsen, and Eugene England. Utilizing Phillips’s analysis of the problem
of evil, I argue that from a Mormon theological perspective, the logical problem of evil is also a
result of confused attributes being forced onto our conceptions of God, and that at the heart of
the problem is not a question of the logical compatibility of the existence of God as defined by
the traditional attributes, but is instead one of the primal existential questions of human life:
“why this suffering?”—a question that afflicts both theist and atheist alike. However, because
both Christian and LDS theodicists maintain the traditional attributes of God (or variations of
them) premised in the problem of evil, the theodicies they propose do further damage by
proposing a foreign world and life where all suffering and evils are ultimately explainable .
According to Phillips, the traditional absolute attributes of omnipotence, omniscience,
and omnibenevolence that are juxtaposed against the existence of evil are themselves
conceptually confused. This is because it is non-sense to speak of God being all powerful, all
knowing, or all good because power, knowledge, and goodness lack grammatical sense when
abstracted away into metaphysical concepts independent of their application. In other words, one
does not simply possess power, but rather has the ability to perform specific actions. One does
not simply possess knowledge, but knows particular things. And one does not possess goodness,
but makes certain decisions that are deemed morally correct.
Furthermore, even if these absolute concepts were understood as mere shorthand to say
that God is able to perform all specific acts, know all particular things, and always act in a
morally upright manner, Phillips’s response to this is that there are some powers that it makes no
sense for God to have, some things that it makes no sense for God to know, and that it makes no
sense to assert that God is an absolutely good decision maker. As Phillips points out concerning
God’s power: “The problem is in the conceptually unspecifiable notion of ‘all power’, as though
‘power’ referred to one thing. We have some of it but God has all of it. Problems for the view
that God can do whatever is not logically contradictory [runs] into trouble as soon as we begin
specifying activities, such as riding a bicycle or licking ice-cream.”1 Similarly, there is the power
to use brute force and do horrendously evil acts. Is this a power that we wish to subscribe to
God? What of the powers of the devil?
The criticism against the premise that God is all knowing is similar. While the
philosopher may contend that God does not possess an abstracted absolute knowledge, but
instead that God knows all individual things that it is possible to know, Phillips again responds
that there are many things that simply do not make sense--or that are nonsense--to say that God
1 PEPG, 23.
knows. For example, what does it mean to say that God knows how to ride a bicycle, knows
what it means to have a late-term miscarriage, or what it is like to be blinded by a camera flash?
These are all things that are knowable by you and me, but cannot be known by God (as
traditionally understood) because they are things that can only be known by beings with physical
legs, uteri, and retinal pigment.
According to Phillips these conceptual flaws exist because the philosophers and
theologians’ attempts to ascribe these attributes to God are ultimately attempts to
anthropomorphize God--that is, they are attempts to ascribe human concepts of power and
knowledge onto a non-human being. Thus, when Homer Simpson asks Ned Flanders if God can
“microwave a burrito so hot that he himself could not eat it?” we should find wisdom in Ned’s
answer: “Well sir, of course, he could, but then again... wow, as melon-scratchers go that’s a
honey-doodle.” While the honey-doodle for the philosophers may lie in the logical contradictions
in the question, Phillips’s point is that it makes no sense to even talk of God microwaving
burritos and eating them. Similarly, it makes no sense to describe God’s knowledge as so
comprehensive that He could to defeat Ken Jennings on Jeopardy. What does it mean to say that
God knows what country Ashgabat is the capitol of or how many PGA Tour wins Tiger Woods
has had? (The answers being “What is Turkmenistan” and “What is 74.”) Instead of referring to
God as the exemplar of super-human power and knowledge, we ought to instead understand
God’s power and knowledge in terms of God. In other words, God’s power is a certain type of
power, and God’s knowledge is a certain type of knowledge. For Phillips, God’s type of power is
not the power to do things, but is rather love; and God’s type of knowledge is not a knowledge of
many things, but is understanding. (I will refer to these again later.)
This tendency of philosophers and theologians to anthropomorphize God is especially
present in discussions of God’s omnibenevolence, where God is spoken of as if He were a moral
character who was freely making decisions between multiple options and always choosing that
which was morally correct. Phillips similarly argues that it makes no sense to discuss God
making moral decisions because doing so involves time, uncertainty, deliberation, and the
possibility of choosing evil--things that we are surrounded with and give sense to our talk of
making moral decision, but which do not describe God. He writes: “There is an obvious
connection between our criticisms of the notion of ‘all power’ attributed to the sovereignty of
God’s will, and the notion of freedom attributed to God’s acts. ‘All power’ cannot be attributed
to God, since some kinds of power are to be contrasted to God’s power. ‘Perfect goodness’
cannot be attributed to God if to say that God acts freely entails that he has the power within him
to refrain.” He continues, “We can only avoid this conceptual trouble if we see that, instead of
saying that God’s will (understood as ‘all power’) is the grammar of God’s nature, we should say
that God’s nature (in a sense of ‘perfect’ goodness ) is the grammar of God’s will. [I]t makes no
sense to say that God could command me to murder or to say that God has within him the power
to do so.” 2
That these theodicists—Phillips points to Alvin Plantinga in particular—maintain their
anthropomorphized concept of God as a moral actor is especially present in their theodicies
where God is the universe’s greatest consequentialist (or in the case of free-will defenses, the
universe’s greatest rule utilitarian), finely tuning the cosmos through his always morally-correct
decisions in order to ensure that the universe maintains a proper balance of unconstrained
freedom, desirable ends, and minimal senseless (or purposeful, depending on how you see it)
evil.
2 PEPG, 33.
Because of this simplified view of the cosmos, the theodicists fail to realize that their
notion of omnibenevolence in light of the problem of evil is nonsensical because a being that is
involved in evil--even for good reasons--cannot be said to be untainted by that evil, or cannot be
said to be perfectly good. Phillips writes: “One primary reason why advocates of theodicies are
blinded to common moral reactions is because of the consequentialism that dominates their
arguments. We are presented with an abstract consequentialist definition of what constitutes a
good act, and an equally abstract justification of why it may be good to allow bad states of affairs
to exist.”3
Because of this abstraction of consequentialist reasoning, these theodicists are able to
compare things such as being required to wear embarrassing pants to school (as does Stephen
Davis) or the pain a child suffers at the dentist (as does Richard Swinburne and numerous other
theologians) to the horrendous suffering of the holocaust and other devastating events. Phillips
remarks:
“We cannot speak of swallowing the Holocaust, as we speak of swallowing the
pain at the dentist’s. What is more, Swineburne knows this as well as anyone else. When
not philosophizing, he does not speak of the Holocaust in the same breath as a visit to the
dentists. We wouldn’t know what to make of someone who did in the moral community
to which Swineburne thinks God, like us, belongs. The difference emerges even when he
philosophizes, for in the case of the Holocaust he has to admit that there is a case to
answer. There is no case to answer for taking a child with infected teeth to a dentist.”4
Unlike the parent, who need not justify their use of the dentist, with God as the utilitarian,
God is nevertheless accountable for choices—such as allowing the Holocaust—that he
3 PEPG, 35.4 PEPG, 39.
supposedly makes. According to Phillips, “We are told that evil is a necessary consequence of an
ultimate good God has in store for us. But whether that evil is done without or with a second
thought, God has to suffer the consequences.”5
To make this point, he refers to the oft-used example of Sophie’s Choice, where a mother
is forced to choose which child, Jan or Eva, will die at the hands of the Nazi’s in order to save
herself and her other child. Philosophers of religion attempting to defend God often point to this
as an example where an evil (the death of the Eva) is allowed--or even chosen--in order to
prevent greater evil (the death of both children and possibly Sophie). While the cool utilitarian
may be able to point to Sophie and argue that she made the morally upright choice, Phillips
points out that Sophie leaves the experience stained and burdened with her participation in sin--
in her choosing the death of her child. As Phillips puts it, “She is involved in a moral tragedy
where, whatever she did, would involve evil. Sophie never thinks of handing over Eva as an act
to be excused in the light of the total situation.”6
[Very briefly summarize previous SMPT paper]
Just as with God’s power and knowledge, Phillips argues that the premise of God’s
goodness falls prey to anthropomorphizing God and attempting to describe him in human terms
of decision making and sin. “If we treat God’s moral agency as akin to our own [we] leave no
logical space for the notion of God’s perfect goodness.”7 Instead, he argues, the sense in which
God is good is similar to that in which God is powerful and knowledgeable. God’s type of
5 PEPG, 41.6 PEPG 42.7 PEPG, 44-45.
goodness is not moral decisions, rather it is love, understanding, and forgiveness. In short, it is
grace.
While the problem of evil itself is based on misconceptions of God’s power, knowledge,
and goodness, by responding to the problem with theodicies that attempt to explain God’s
existence in light of suffering (or vice-versa, to explain evil in light of God’s absolute attributes),
the theodicists deny the very life that the supposed problem arises from. According to Phillips,
the basis for the problem of evil is not the philosophical puzzle wherein God is placed against the
evils of the world, but is rather the existential question of life that both religious believers and
atheists face. It is the question that asks: “Why this suffering?” For Phillips, this is not a question
that seeks an answer, but is rather one that emphasizes the futility of any answer that might be
given. When the cancer victim asks “Why this suffering?” or when the parents of a rape and
murder victim ask “Why this suffering?” a biological explanation of the causes of cancer or the
circumstantial and psychological facts of the crime are not the desired responses. Rather than a
question that seeks an answer, it is an acknowledgment that life--that living--involves seemingly
indiscriminate, senseless, and undesirable suffering. In other words, it is a declaration of
frustration concerning the raggedness of life.
As Phillips puts it: “When a sense of the limits of human existence has led to
bewilderment and to the natural cry, ‘Why is this happening to me?’ ‘Why are things like this?’
it is essential to note that these questions are asked, not for want of explanations, but after
explanations have provided all they can offer. The questions seems to seek for something
explanations cannot give. This is what theodicies and secular attempts at explanation fail to
realize.”8
8 PEPG, 134.
By attempting to provide an explanation to why bad things happen, to “Why this
suffering?”, the theodicist attempts to give the theological equivalent of a doctor telling the
cancer patient that her suffering is the result of a mutated growth suppressor gene resulting in
abnormal cellular production, or a police officer telling grieving parents that theirs and their
child’s suffering is a result of their child unfortunately being at the wrong place at the wrong
time where a neurotic pedophile happened to be desiring to fulfill his deviance. Even more so, by
playing by the rules of the problem of evil--where every evil must ultimately be accounted for or
explained--or else God seizes to exist--the theodicist attempts to provide the cosmological divine
answer to “Why this suffering?” They call it God’s will, a means to a greater good, and an
unfortunate allowance for our benefit. Whatever the suffering, God has a reason, there is an
answer. And in doing so, they deny the very raggedness of life that is a part of our very concept
of living.
The theodicist may respond to this by pointing out that Phillips is wrong because while
the theodicy may provide a broad explanation for suffering in the world, because we do not share
the mind of God, the seeming uncertainty and raggedness remains for us. In other words, while
the omniscient God knows why a particular suffering is omnibenevolently allowed by His
omnipotent will, the individual person does not. Adding to this, they argue, as does Stephen
Davis, that the momentary suffering from both the pain and the raggedness itself will also be
overcome in the eschaton by an understanding and reflection on life in God’s presence. In other
words, it will all make sense in the end.
Phillips responds that even though God’s supposed particular reason for a particular
suffering might be shielded from the individual, the theodicist nevertheless attempts to remove
the raggedness by declaring that for whatever reason, it is God’s will. Furthermore, any attempt
to appeal to the eschaton as a response to the problem of evil mistaking attempts to resolve it by
an appeal to its being resolved. According to Phillips, “If the transcendent divine plan refers to a
future state of affairs after death, continuous, in some sense, with this life, which is supposed to
justify or redeem its tribulations, it is difficult to see why this future life should not be as
puzzling as our present one.”9 In other words, saving the solution to the problem of evil for a
later day does not solve it, but merely sets it aside to be visited again. If the answer does not
work for us now, there is no reason it should be sufficient later.
Ludwig Wittgenstein famously quipped that “What’s ragged should be left ragged,”
meaning that there were certain ways of life in which philosophy was an alien intrusion, forcing
concepts, logic, and/or meaning where no more is needed. Like an amateur restorationist who
seeks to sharpen and brighten a centuries old tattered and worn mural of Jesus, the strokes of the
theodicist’s philosophical paintbrushes ultimately create a brightly colored, alien, and horrendous
freaky Jesus. Phillips understood his philosophical project as removing the theodicists’
“corrections” and returning the mural of life back to its original and beautiful raggedness.
Latter-day Saint philosophical responses to the problem of evil take an interesting
mirrored response that share Phillips’s rejection of the absolute attributes of God. However,
while Phillips argued that the attributes were anthropomorphizing a non-anthropomorphic God
and were thus conceptually misapplied, these LDS responses instead contend that the traditional
absolutes cannot appropriately be applied to God because God is actually anthropomorphic--that
is, because God is fleshly embodied, physically located, within time, and emotionally involved,
his attributes must be finite or at least absolute in a limited sense. Because of this, it at least
makes conceptual or grammatical sense to say that God can cook a burrito in the microwave, can
9 PEPG 131-32.
know how to ride a bicycle, and can deliberate over a decision. However, I argue that despite the
denial of God’s infinitely absolute attributes, these LDS theodicies are nevertheless subject to
Phillips criticism--in that they still assume the underlying absolute assumptions of traditional
philosophical theology, force an anthropomorphic understanding of what type of attributes God
has, and propose a theodicy that also denies the existential raggedness of life.
Without going into too much detail, the LDS rejection of absolute omnipotence is a
consequence of three traditional Mormon beliefs: the anthropomorphic nature of God just
mentioned, the uncreatedness of laws and matter, and the uncreatedness of individual free-will.
Thus, God’s power is limited by his finite embodiment, his inability to circumvent natural law,
and his inability to relinquish human-free will. In and of itself, this could be reason for LDS
theologians to cross out omnipotence from the problem of evil and announce the problem
dissolved. Pain and suffering may exist simply because God cannot circumvent the biological
laws resulting in cancer, because he cannot stop the child-predator from his present location, and
if he could, he cannot intercede into the predators free-will.
The LDS theodocists, however, do not clap the chalk off their hands and announce
“mission accomplished.” Instead, their response is to argue that yes God’s power is bounded in
some way, but His power is still infinite (or at least really, really, really, really powerful). This, I
believe, is a result of two things. First, it attempts to take into account the numerous traditions
and scriptural narratives where God does seem to circumvent natural law or violate free-will to
divide seas, destroy cities, cure diseases, and change hearts. Second, it is because of what I
believe to be the same conceptual flaw pointed out by Philips--that by maintaining God’s infinite
or near-infinite power, the LDS theodicist is forcing an anthropomorphic or mundane concept of
power on God, where to have more power is always better.
Take the following statements involving power:
“President Barack Obama is the most powerful man in America.”
“Because of his influence Rush Limbaugh is has more power than Obama.”
“A twelve-year-old priesthood-holder has more power than either Obama or Limbaugh.”
“The current UFC champion is more powerful than all of them.”
and
“The sun at center of our solar system has more power than everyone who has ever lived
combined.”
Which of these best describes God’s power? Is it a combination of all of these plus many
more multiplied to near infinity, or is it something different altogether?
Blake Ostler, David Paulsen, and other LDS theodicists seem to imply that it is the
former. For example, Ostler writes that “Mormons can agree that the set of great-making
properties defining Godhood must include maximal power. [T]here cannot be a greater being
than God in Mormon thought. God is necessarily unsurpassable by any other being.”10 And
David Paulsen writes: “God’s power is not absolute power to suspend the operations of all
natural laws, but rather the power to maximally utilize natural laws to bring about His
purposes.”11
What of God’s omniscience. Again, to make things short, as many such as Ostler, have
argued, because God is embodied He must be located within time. Combined with a premise of
indeterminate free-will, God’s knowledge must be limited by those things which are contingent
upon free will. Unlike open-theism where God conceals the future from himself to allow for
human free-will, according to this LDS approach the future is not yet a thing to be known.
10 W&tMCoG, 321, 32311 Find source on NMC, (note 164?)
Because much of the future is made up of contingent events that are not yet things, God can still
be described as knowing all things.
But even if we posit that all knowable things consist of only that which has existed in the
past and in the present, what sense does it mean to say that God knows all things? While God can
certainly hypothetically learn to ride a bike, assuming that he does not have a bicycle in heaven,
what does it mean to say that God knows how to ride a bike? Where did he learn it? Does God
know how many degrees of separation there are between Kevin Bacon and Kirby Heyborne? (2,
Heyborne was in “Me, You, a Bag & Bamboo” with Margaret Easley , who was in “We Married
Margo” with Bacon). Because he is embodied we can say that God might know pain, but what
does it mean to say that he knows what it is like to experience a late-term miscarriage or give
birth to a still-born child? Does God know what pizza tastes like? Does he know how it feels to
confess to a spouse that he deeply loves that he was once unfaithful to her? Does he know what it
is like to read a text message while driving and kill a child walking to school? Is God’s
knowledge a knowledge of things, or is it something else?
Again, the same approach can be made with God’s goodness. Because God is in time, it
makes conceptual sense to say that God can deliberate over a choice. But does God face moral
dilemmas? Does he struggle with decisions? Can he choose wrong? From a Mormon perspective
these questions could perhaps be answered in the affirmative, adding that God’s
omnibenevolence is not prescriptive of what God necessarily does, but is rather descriptive of
what God has done and continues to do. Returning to Phillips, however, is this what we mean by
God’s goodness? In light of evil, are we also guilty of anthropomorphizing God’s goodness,
turning God into the universe’s greatest planner, the Great Rule Utilitarian? As Paulsen and
Ostler claim, “God is omnipotent, but he cannot prevent evil without preventing the possibility of
greater goods or ends—the value of which more than offsets the disvalue of evil.”12 Can he allow
the Holocaust—even if it is for some supposed greater good—and remain unscathed?
Like the traditional Christian theodicies, the LDS response to the problem of evil has
been to ultimately affirm the premises concerning God’s attributes with slight modifications.
God may not be all powerful, but He is powerful enough; God may not know all things past,
present, and future, but He knows everything there is to know; and God may not be necessarily
good, but He has always chosen the right. Because of this, LDS theodicies share the same
problem of their Christian counter-parts: they inevitably present a cosmological plan where all
perceived pain and suffering is accounted for--where no suffering (or at least no preventable
suffering, depending how limited God is by natural law) is allowed that does not result in a
greater good and is not made good in the eschaton.
By attempting to meet the metaphysical assumptions imposed on God, both Christian and
Latter-day Saint theodicists seek to provide God’s answer to the problem of evil in such a way
that they confusedly assume that the primal question is satisfied—that is, they provide an answer
to “why this suffering?” In doing so, suffering and evil in the presence of God’s existence are
explained through a system of checks and balances where each are either purposeful pains
utilized for a greater good (for example, X develops moral character), unfortunate but necessary
results of goods (X is a result of the great good of free-will), or compensated or overshadowed in
the eschaton (X will be seen as “worth it” or seem to be “not that big of a deal” in heaven).
For Phillips, living in the face of unexplainable suffering, where there is no reason why
one is stricken and another is not, undergirds our very conception and grammar of life. To talk of
life without this is to be confused about what is meant by human life and experience. Compare
this with Lehi’s teachings in 2 Nephi Chapter 2 (which is often presented as a theodicy or
12 SSSM, 265.
defense): “For it must needs be, that there is an opposition in all; things. If not righteousness
could not be brought about to pass, neither wickedness, neither holiness not misery, neither good
nor bad. Wherefore, all things must needs be a compound of one; wherefore, if it should be one
body it must needs remain dead, having no life neither death, nor corruption nor incorruption,
happiness nor misery, neither sense nor insensibility” (vs.11).
For the theodicists to point to heaven or an afterlife as a resolution to this struggle, is to
misuse the very language of life. To repeat Phillips’s quote from earlier, “If the transcendent
divine plan refers to a future state of affairs after death, continuous, in some sense, with this life,
which is supposed to justify or redeem its tribulations, it is difficult to see why this future life
should not be as puzzling as our present one.”
Again, Phillips point is that if the next life is to be called life, then it must be just as
puzzling and ragged as this one; and this marks another point at which he and LDS thought
diverge. For Phillips, a primary reason why an appeal to the afterlife cannot be used to answer
the problem of evil is because, for him, talk of a life after death is conceptually nonsensical.
According to Phillips, those things that give sense to our concept of life—particularly
relationships—do not exist in the next life. In other words, if I am no longer a husband, son,
brother, father, friend, uncle, etc., what does it mean to say that I continue to exist, when my very
understanding of myself is parasitic upon those relationships. Similarly, he argues, in what sense
can the theodicist talk of God’s moral character when God lacks the very things that give sense
to us talking about each other having moral character—bodies, emotions, relationships, and the
ability to suffer.
However, far from “solving” the problem of evil and providing an answer to the
suffering, what the anthropomorphic understanding of God and the afterlife reveal is that the
problem of evil (not the philosophers’ problem of evil, but the sufferer’s problem of evil) is as
eternal as eternal life. Whereas LDS theodicists, like their Christian compatriots, want to argue
or imply that in the end all will be revealed—or at the very least, God knows the answer to “why
this suffering?” what LDS scripture and theology may show us is that what will be revealed in
the afterlife is that the problems and questions will still remain, that life will continue to be as
ragged as ever, because that is what life is. The problem of evil is not just a problem for mortal
man, but is God’s problem as well.
A few years ago at the SMPT conference in Claremont, I also presented a comparison of
Phillips’s thought and LDS theology to argue that eternal life should not be understood as
something experienced only after this mortal life or an extension of this life on another sphere,
but instead that eternal life denotes a type of life that God lives (similar to how God’s power,
knowledge, and goodness do not denote degree but rather the type of power, knowledge, and
goodness that God has or expresses). I argued that what made eternal life in both the present and
in the next life conceptually possible were the shared concepts that exist in both, particularly
relationships of family and friends--the very things that Phillips claimed were lacking in
concepts of the afterlife, and whose lack was sufficient reason for him to repeatedly argue that it
made no sense to call a continued existence after death “life.”
Along these same lines, for our next sphere of existence to be appropriately be called
“life,” or for God to be understood as possessing eternal life in a meaningful way, then our
ragged experience with suffering must remain intact and undissolved into the next life. The
sufferer’s problem of evil, “Why this suffering?” must be a puzzle and struggle for us in heaven,
and a continued struggle for even God.
Thus in the book of Moses when Enoch asks God, “How is it thou canst weep?” God
doesn’t reply with a theodicy or explanation to suffering. Rather he simply points to the evils of
existence and replies “Wherefore should not the heavens weep, seeing these shall suffer?”—or,
how could I not weep? Enoch wanted the God of the theodicies. After all, Enoch pointed out:
“were it possible that man could number the particles of the earth, yea, millions of earths like
this, it would not be a beginning to the number of thy [Gods] creations.” But God doesn’t
respond with a theodicy—with an explanation of his power, knowledge, absolute goodness, and
his utilitarian sensibilities. Instead it is response of heartbreak, misery, and even despair.
“Wherefore should not the heavens weep?”
Enoch’s encounter with the weeping God, however, should not be confused of being a
theodicy. Here, God is not a weeping deity who mourns over the hardship of soul-making and
who sheds tears because consequentialism is difficult. After all, the Book of Moses does not end
with soul-making glee, but with God angrily telling Noah that he is going to “destroy all flesh off
the face of the earth.”
To understand this passage, I think Simone Weil provides insight when she remarks that
“The Gospel contains a conception of human life, not a theology.” In this light, the account of
the weeping god is not a theology describing God’s anthropomorphic attributes, including His
power to destroy all life, but is rather a demonstration of God condescending to show us what
life is. Furthermore, and more importantly the text allows not just Enoch but the reader to partake
in the divine attributes. As we read it we are forced to participate in God’s power, knowledge,
and goodness as we attempt to love, understand, and in the light of the angry and violent act that
God is about to perform, find grace in forgiving Him.