Abstract

Theodicy is the attempt to justify God’s righteousness and goodness amidst the experience of evil and suffering in the world. This article discusses Karl Barth’s Christological and Jürgen Moltmann’s eschatological approach to the problem of theodicy. The central theoretical argument is that the problem of theodicy poses a major hermeneutical challenge to Christianity that needs to be addressed, since it has implications for the way in which theology defines itself. Questions that arise are: What are the boundaries of theology? What are the grounds on which the question of theodicy must be asked? Is the Christian understanding of God’s omnipotence truly Scriptural? The modern formulation of theodicy finds its origin in the Enlighten- ment that approaches the problem from a theoretical framework based on human experience. This theoretical approach leads, however, to further logical inconsistencies. Theology must rather approach the problem in the same way as Scripture does, by taking the cross, resurrection and parousia of Christ as point of departure. The cross and resurrection are a sign that suffering is not part of God’s plan and at the same time an affirmation of God’s victory over suffering and evil.

Highlights

  • Theodicy is the attempt to justify God’s righteousness and goodness amidst the experience of evil and suffering in the world

  • The Holocaust and Auschwitz led to the rise of what Moltmann (1974:221) calls protest atheism

  • By seeing God’s suffering on the cross as the point of departure for Christian theology, Moltmann emphasises the solidarity of God with suffering, thereby removing abstraction from the debate and bringing pastoral comfort to those who suffer

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Summary

Introduction

Theodicy (theo-dike) is the attempt to justify God’s righteousness and goodness amidst the experience of evil and suffering in the world. In essence it asks questions about the unique identity and attributes of God, the relation between God’s omnipotence, goodness and love. The horrors of the Holocaust gave rise to a new theological movement in the 1950s and 1960s that attempted to come to terms with evil and suffering by focusing on a theologia crucis. Karl Barth can be considered as the founding father of this theological movement He emphasised, over and against liberal theology, the central importance of the event of the cross as the defining moment in history that joins history and eternity together. The central theoretical argument of this article is that the problem of theodicy poses a major hermeneutical challenge to Christianity that needs to be addressed, since it has implications for the way in which theology define itself

Christocentric theodicy
Evaluation
Eschatological theodicy
The hermenetical challenge to Christianity
The historical origin of theodicy
The boundaries of theology
The omnipotence of God
Conclusion
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