- Joined
- Jul 6, 2005
- Posts
- 41,664
- Reaction score
- 13
- Points
- 0
- Location
- Home is where the heart is
- Website
- www.myspace.com
That has always been troublesome about the Job story. The only answer I've encountered that is at all satisfying is the Calvinist one, that the pot can't complain about what the potter does with it -- but that isn't much more satisfying than his position that God created some for the purpose of damning them, which as far as I'm concerned is contrary to several points of the New Testament, foremost among them the statement that God is Love.
OTOH the assertion that "An act of evil is still evil, despite the nature of the actor", is arguably only true only if there is equivalency between actors.
When you say some people are created Him to be damned, then he has already chosen the purpose of their existence. There is no free will involved, just a path towards damnation, and to have them suffer for eternity because they were created for the purpose of damnation is still 'unsatisfactory'.
The equivalence of actors argument is just a get out clause. It does not address the nature of the evil acts that has already happened.

