Does God Create Evil?: Answering the Calvinists
By Award-Winning Author Eli Kittim
Calvinism Has Confused God's Foreknowledge With His Sovereignty
Dr. R.C. Sproul once said:
There is no maverick molecule if God is
That is to say, if God cannot control the smallest things we know of in the universe, such as the subatomic particles known as āquarks,ā then we cannot trust him to keep His promises. But just because God set the universe in motion doesnāt mean that every detail therein is held ipso facto to be caused by him. God could still be sovereign and yet simultaneously permit the existence of evil and free will. This is not a contradiction (see Compatibilism aka Soft determinism). It seems that Calvinism has confused Godās foreknowledge with his sovereignty.
Calvinists often use Bible verses out-of-context to support the idea that God is partial: that he plays favorites with human beings. They often quote Exodus 33.19b (ESV):
I will beĀ gracious to whomĀ I will be gracious,
and will show mercy on whomĀ I will show
But the only thing that this verse is saying is that Godās grace is beyond human understanding, not that God is partial and biased (cf. Rom. 11.33-34). By contrast, the parable of the vineyard workers (Mt 20.1ā16) promotes equality between many different classes of people. One interpretation of this parable would be that late converts to Christianity earn equal rewards along with early converts, and there need be no jealousy among the latter. This can be understood on many different levels. For example, one could view the early laborers as Jews who may resent the Gentile newcomers for being treated as equals by God. Some seem to get more rewards, others less, depending on many factors unbeknownst to us. But the point of the parable is that God is fair. No one gets cheated. However, in Calvinism, God is not fair. He does as he pleases. He creates evil and chooses who will be saved and who will be lost. This view is more in line with the capricious gods of Greek mythology than with the immutable God of the Bible.
Thatās why Calvinism speaks of limited atonement. Christās atoning death is not for everyone, but only for a select few. You cannot look an atheist in the eye and tell them that Christ died for you. Youād be lying because, according to Calvinism, he may not have died for them. So the story goes...
But thatās a gross misinterpretation. Romans 8.29-30 doesnāt say that at all. Itās NOT saying that God used his powers indiscriminately to influence Individuals in some cases, but not in others. Nor does it follow that God played favorites and decided at the outset that some will be saved, and others not (tough luck, as it were). Not at all. All it says is that God can *foresee* the future!
God doesnāt CAUSE everything to happen as it does, but he does SEE what will happen. So, insofar as God was able to āseeā who would eventually submit to his will (and who would not), one could say that God āforeknewā him. In Romans 8.29, the Greek term ĻĻĪæĪĪ³Ī½Ļ comes from the word ĻĻογινĻĻĪŗĻ (proginóskó), which means āto know beforehandā or to āforeknow.ā It doesnāt imply determinism, the notion that all events in history, including those of human action, are predetermined by extraneous causes, and that people have no say in the matter, and are therefore not responsible for their actions. It simply means to know beforehand. Thatās all. Case in point, Isaiah, Daniel, and John the Revelator saw the future; but they didnāt cause it.
God would never have predestined some people to be eternally lost and some to be eternally saved. That would not be just. Similarly, Romans 8.29-30 is only referring to those individuals whom God āforeknewā (ĻĻĪæĪγνĻ) that would meet the conditions of his covenant, those are the same he predestined (ĻĻĪæĻĻιĻεν), called (į¼ĪŗĪ¬Ī»ĪµĻεν), justified (į¼Ī“ικαίĻĻεν), and glorified (į¼Ī“ĻξαĻεν)! Otherwise, how could God have possibly predestined those who he foresaw that would NOT meet the conditions of his covenant?
The Greek term ĻĻĪæĻĻιĻεν (proÅrisen; predestined) is derived from the word ĻĻοοĻĪÆĪ¶Ļ (proorizó), which means āto predetermineā or āforeordain.ā In other words, those whom God could *foresee* in the future as being faithful, those same individuals he pre-approved to be conformed to the image of his son. So, by āpredestinationā God simply means that heās ādeclaring the end from the beginningā (Isa. 46.9-10 NASB). Itās not as if God was the direct cause of their decision or free choice. He simply foresaw those who had already chosen to be conformed to the image of his son of their own accord. Notice that in Rom. 8.29 (Berean Literal Bible), the text says that BECAUSE God foreknew them, he predestined them. This means that the *foresight* came first. Since God could see the outcome, he āforeknewā who would be lost and who would be saved:
because those whom He foreknew, He also
predestined to be conformed to the image
Does John Piper represent Biblical Christianity?
Theologian and pastor John Piper cites Acts 4.27-28 (ESV) to prove his point that God determines everything that happens:
for truly in this city there were gathered
together against your holy servant Jesus,
whom you anointed, both Herod and
Pontius Pilate, along with the Gentiles and
the peoples of Israel, to do whatever your
hand and your plan had predestined to take
Piper says, when you understand the complete sovereignty of God, that is to say, how he is behind everything, that he is implicated in every aspect of existence, youāll go crazy. Why? This occurs, I suspect, because the person you thought was your best friend turns out to be your worst enemy. How can you trust him? Piper says,
He [God] governed the most wicked thing
that ever happened in the world, the
crucifixion of my savior.
Piper says that there is no randomness in the universe, and that God is behind the Tsunamis and everything else that occurs on our planet. That would imply that God is behind the earthquakes, the hurricanes, the train wrecks, the airplane crashes, the massacres, the terrorist attacks, the racist attacks, the rapes, the violent riots, the Holocaust, the Third Reich, the Manson murders, the serial killings, cannibalism, the world wars, the abortions, the beheadings, the heinous crimes, the shootings, beatings, & stabbings of the elderly, and the filicides and genocides of history. Godās behind it all. And if you contemplate this idea, it will drive you mad, says John Piper. So, in order to stay sane, he suggests that we focus on the Cross. We have to believe that God nevertheless loves us and that he was behind the murder of Jesus for our salvation. This will keep us safe from harm; from going mad, that is. Really?
In other words, Godās dictatorist regime or tyrannical authority works much like the Mafia, a secret organization or crime syndicate which controls everything from the street corner thugs to the highest levels of government. God is like a mafia boss who puts out a contract to āwhackā somebody but, instead of killing him himself and taking the blame, he orders an underboss (Satan) to do his dirty work. In other words, he hires accomplices to kill people on his behalf because heās such a coward that he doesnāt want to take the responsibility and do it himself, or to be seen as evil, yet heās the real cause of everything, good and evil. A literal or fundamentalist interpretation of the Old Testament will no doubt lead to that conclusion (cf. Isa. 45.7). This is also the god of the Gnostics, the inferior creator-god (or demiurge) that was revealed through Hebrew scripture, who was responsible for all instances of falsehood and evil in the world!
But is this a sincere, honorable, and reliable person whom you could trust? Or is this a vile, dishonest, and despicable person who pretends to be something he is not? Does this god deserve our worship? Is he not a liar? Is this a truly loving, Holy God, or is he rather a cruel, deceitful, and merciless beast that hides behind a veneer of righteousness, much like the mafia bosses and the corrupt heads of state?
Then, after depicting a gruesome picture of a cold blooded killer-God who would order a hit on women and innocent children (cf. 1 Sam. 15.3), Piper cites Isa. 53.10:
Yet it was the will of the Lord to crush him
Therefore the worst sin that was ever
committed was ordained by God.
Piper exclaims, āThe answer is yes, he controls everything, and he does it for his glory and our good.ā This is the God of Calvinism, fashioned from the pit of hell itself, which depicts Godās rule as a deep state or a totalitarian government, āA celestial North Korea,ā in the words of the critic Christopher Hitchens.
What ever happened to the attribute of omnibenevolence, the doctrine that God is all-good, sans evil (cf. Ps 106.1; 135.3; Nah. 1.7; Mk 10.18)? Isaiah 65.16 calls him āthe God of truthā (cf. Jn 17.17), while Titus 1.1-2 asserts that God ānever lies.ā Psalm 92.15 (NIV) declares:
The LORD is upright; he is my Rock, and
there is no wickedness in him.
So, there seems to be a theological confusion in Calvinism about what God does and doesnāt do. Predestination is based on foreknowledge, not on the impulsive whims of a capricious deity. To ācauseā is one thing; to āforeknowā is quite another.
At a deeper, philosophical level weāre talking about the problem of evil: whoās responsible for all the suffering and evil in the world? Piper would say, God is. Blame it on God. I would say that this teaching not only contradicts the Bible but also the attributes of God. If hell was prepared for the devil and his angels (Mt 25.41), and if God is held accountable for orchestrating everything, then the devil cannot be held morally responsible for all his crimes against humanity. Besides, doesnāt scripture say that Christ āwent about doing good and healing all who were oppressed by the devilā? (Acts 10.38 ESV). Yet, according to Calvinism, God not only creates evil but is himself ipso facto evil! Thus, neither John Piper nor Calvinism represent Biblical Christianity! Rather, this is an aberration, a contradiction, a false doctrine. 1 Timothy 4.1 (CEV) warns:
God's Spirit clearly says that in the last
days many people will turn from their faith.
They will be fooled by evil spirits and by
teachings that come from demons.
In the following video, a question was posed to Calvinist pastor John Piper:
Has God predetermined every detail in the