2002-02-10 Why do bad things happen to good people?
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February 10, 2002
The question, "Why do bad things happen to good people?" was chosen to
become the title of best-selling a book. It has occupied more
substantial writers through the ages. Theologians speak of "theodicy",
which is the task of explaining the existence of evil in a world made
by a good God. People who do not believe in a good God should logically
have no problem with the existence of evil, but most of them do because
1) they are not logical and 2) they are living off a remnant assumption
of the rights of goodness over evil.
Christ says that no one is good save his Father in Heaven.
All goodness comes from His merciful love. That is why we are truly
human to the degree that we give thanks, and the heart of existence is
in the perfect thanksgiving of the Eucharist. This is lost on armchair
philosophers who pout when they cannot measure the calculus of
innocence and guilt. That great figure Job had three sympathizers who
only made his pain worse by their superficiality. Evil is a mystery,
but it is just a senseless puzzle for the spiritually adolescent.
Bad things often happen because they are allowed, and even
made, to happen. The evil of September 11 was the direct work of bad
people. Perhaps it could have been prevented if in past years the world
had taken the terrorists more seriously. Each day in the United States,
the number of babies killed before birth is larger than the number of
people who suffered and died on September 11. It is made to happen by
"material agents" of evil who commit the act directly. It is allowed to
happen by "formal agents" who pass evil laws, defend the evil as though
it were good, and suppress the truth. On January 22, over 100,000
pro-lifers marched in Washington, and were ignored by the major media.
Bad things happen to good people when goodness is suppressed. This past
week, millions of tax dollars that could have been spent on the poor
and on rebuilding our city's economy, had to be spent instead on
security because would-be rioters were menacing the World Economic
Forum. The waste was the direct result of deluded people misusing the
free will God gave them.
Lent begins with Jesus meeting Satan in order to protect us
from ourselves. Mature minds should ask only one question, and only
Christ Crucified has the answer: "Why do bad things happen to the one
good Man?"
Fr. George W. Rutler
