by Ravindra Swarupa Dasa A
rabbi’s best-selling book proposes a radical solution to the problem of evil.
Does it work?
About five years ago, when we
were having an altar installed in our new temple, the overseer from the marble
company would regularly bring his seven-year-old son along to watch. The boy
was very handsome, with jet-black hair and pale skin and long, dark eyelashes.
He was well-behaved and always seemed in a good humor even though he could
hardly walk at all. I never saw him take more than a few steps, leaning on a
wall and straining his torso with an awkward twisting motion and then swinging
forward a leg clamped into a large, clumsy brace.
The boy had been born crippled.
While he was cheerful despite that, his father was not. His father was an angry
man. “When that boy was born I stopped going to church,” he told me once, as he
knelt on our altar putting grout between the marble slabs. “I never did
anything bad enough to deserve this. Sure, I’m not a saint, but I don’t deserve
this. And even if I did, what could he have done?”
The aggrieved father, an
unsophisticated marble contractor, was raising a problem that has long
preoccupied Western religious thinkers, so much so that it has created a
special discipline called theodicy, a branch of theology concerned with
justifying the ways of God to man. Theodicy deals with what is usually called
“the problem of evil. “St. Augustine cast it into the form of a dilemma:
“Either God cannot or God will not eliminate evil from the world. If He cannot,
He is not all-powerful; if He will not. He is not all-good.” This formulation
makes the logic of the problem clear: to show that the existence of a world
with evil in it is compatible with the existence of a God who is both
all-powerful and all-good. To deny either one of these attributes would easily
explain evil, but orthodox theologians have always considered that unacceptable.
Those who find the problem of
evil intractable usually deny the existence of God outright rather than settle
for a God limited either in power or goodness. Would such a finite being really
qualify to be called “God”? Would he be worthy of our worship?
Although philosophers and
theologians have left us a huge body of technical literature on the problem of
evil, it is far from a theoretical concern. It is everybody’s problem, sooner
or later. Suffering is universal. But oddly enough, practically as widespread
is the sufferer’s feeling that he has been unfairly singled out. From millions
come the outraged cry: “Why me! What did I do to deserve this?”
It is for such people that Harold
S. Kushner, a Massachusetts rabbi, has written his book When Bad Things Happen
to Good People. It is a painfully honest treatment of what the author claims is
the one theological issue that reaches folks “where they really care.”
Kushner’s book grew out of his
personal pain; his testimony commands respect. He tells how his son was
afflicted from infancy with progeria, a disease that brings on rapid aging, so
that Kushner saw him grow bald and wrinkled, stooped and frail, until he died
of old age in his fourteenth year. Kushner presents the victim’s point of view,
and he lets us hear the real voices of people in pain. In that stark light, the
standard religious justifications for our misfortunes, which Kushner lays out
one by one, do indeed seem like facile verbal shuffles that don’t take people’s
suffering seriously but simply try, however lamely, to get God off the hook.
Kushner effectively criticizes
the standard answers handed out by priests, ministers, and rabbis, and he
offers instead his own radically unorthodox solution. His book has been a
bestseller for months, and he has attracted a large and grateful following
among Jews, Catholics, and Protestants. Indeed, the popularity of his view
among members of America’s mainstream churches and synagogues suggests
something of a grassroots theological rebellion.
The most reprehensible device of
theodicy, in Kushner’s view, is to remove the blame from God by putting it onto
the sufferer, to explain suffering “by assuming that we deserve what we get,
that somehow our misfortunes come as punishment for our sins.” To accept that
bad things happen to us as God’s punishment, Kushner says, may help us make
sense of the world, give us a compelling reason to be good, and sustain our
belief in an all- powerful and just Deity—yet it is not “religiously adequate.”
By “religiously adequate” Kushner
means “comforting.” Seeing suffering as a punishment for sin is not comforting
because it teaches people to blame themselves for their misfortunes, and so
creates guilt, and it also “makes people hate God, even as it makes them hate
themselves.”
Kushner tells us of a couple who
blamed their teenage daughter’s sudden death on their own failure to observe
the prescribed fast on a Jewish holy day: “They sat there feeling that their
daughter’s death had been their fault; had they been less selfish and less lazy
about the Yom Kippur fast some six months earlier, she might still be alive.
They sat there angry at God for having exacted his pound of flesh so strictly,
but afraid to admit their anger for fear that He would punish them again. Life
had hurt them and religion could not comfort them. Religion was making them
feel worse.”
It is a virtue of Kushner’s work
to bring this anger at God up front, to talk at length about what few believers
have had the courage to admit, even to themselves. Many people must be grateful
that someone has recognized their real feelings and has dealt with them openly.
But the worst thing about the
belief that our misdeeds cause our misfortunes, says Kushner, is that it
doesn’t even fit the facts. People do suffer ills they don’t deserve; bad
things happen to good people all the time. Kushner adamantly maintains this. To
the thousands who resent life’s unfair treatment, who proclaim in outrage and
indignation, “I didn’t do anything to deserve this!” Kushner answers, comfortingly,
“That’s right, you didn’t.”
And Kushner is not talking about
saints, about people who never do wrong. Rather, he wants to know “why ordinary
people, nice friendly neighbors, neither extraordinarily good nor
extraordinarily bad, should suddenly have to face the agony of pain and
tragedy… . They are neither much better nor very much worse than most people we
know; why should their lives be so much harder?”
Here, tapping into a great
psychic underground of resentment, Kushner has found his following. He has been
willing to openly acknowledge a vast repressed sense of betrayal, a great
silenced accusation that leaks unwillingly from the hearts of believers and
wends its way up to the divine ear as the universal unvoiced anti-prayer: “You
didn’t hold up your end of the bargain!”
Kushner insists that the innocent
suffer, and as conclusive proof he advances that grievance which has been the
bane of Judeo-Christian theodicy and which occasioned his own harrowing foray
into the problem of evil: the suffering and death of children.
This is what drove the marble
contractor to take up atheism, the usual response of those who feel God has
failed them. But atheism is the response Kushner wants to prevent with his
book. To restore the faith of those who have been spiritually devastated by
misfortune, Kushner offers his own story of how he and his wife “managed to go
on believing in God and in the world after we had been hurt.”
Kushner is indeed convinced that
the existence of a God both all-good and all-powerful is incompatible with the
evils of our world; yet he wants us to go on believing in God. His conclusion,
then, is simple: we can go on believing in God—but not in a God who is
all-powerful. God is good, but there are limits to what He can do. God does not
want us to suffer; He is as angry and upset at our misfortunes as we are. But
He is also helpless.
This is Kushner’s credo: “I
believe in God,” he says, but—“I recognize His limitations.” As a result,
Kushner tells us in relief, “I no longer hold God responsible for illnesses,
accidents, and natural disasters, because I realize that I gain little and I
lose much when I blame God for these things. I can worship a God who hates
suffering but cannot eliminate it more easily than I can worship a God who
chooses to make children suffer and die, for whatever exalted reason.”
It is not hard for me to put
myself in the place of Kushner or the marble contractor: I have children of my
own. I can even understand why, given the kind of religion they know, Kushner
can worship only a finite deity, and the marble contractor can’t bear to enter
a church. Nevertheless, I don’t have the problem with God that they do. When
bad things happen, I don’t find myself calling into question either His power
or His goodness.
Of course, I am a devotee of
Krishna; my religious convictions are founded upon the Vedic theism revealed in
the Bhagavad-gita and the Srimad-Bhagavatam. To espouse those convictions has
been viewed by most normal Americans as a radical thing to do. But now we find
that many normal Americans are willing to do something that, in its way, is
more radical than what I’ve done. They are abandoning one of the most basic and
universal theistic tenets: they are becoming worshipers of
God-the-not-almighty.
I want to tell you how we handle
the problem of evil. If you, like so many others, are unsatisfied with the
standard Judeo-Christian theodicy, perhaps you will consider our Krishna
conscious view before following Rabbi Kushner.
In the Bhagavad-gita Krishna
explains that you and I, like all living beings, are spiritual entities, souls.
We now animate bodies made of matter, but we are not these bodies. Our
involvement with matter is unfortunate, for it is the cause of all our
suffering. We rightly belong in the spiritual kingdom, where life is eternal,
full of knowledge and bliss. There everyone is joyously surrendered to the
control of God as they directly serve Him in love. Every action is motivated
exclusively by the desire to satisfy God.
But some of us perversely wished
God’s position for ourselves. We wanted independence so that we could try to
enjoy and control others like God does. Yet we cannot, of course, take God’s
place; He alone has no master. But to grant our desires, God sends us to the
material world, where He now controls us indirectly, through His material
nature and its laws. Here we can forget God, strive to fulfill our desires, and
have the illusion of independence.
Yet we are controlled by the laws
of nature, and these force us to perpetually inhabit a succession of temporary
material bodies. In ignorance, we identify ourselves with each body we enter,
and we suffer again and again the pains of birth, old age, disease, and death.
Life after life we transmigrate through plant, animal, and human bodies,
sometimes on this planet, sometimes on far better ones, sometimes on far worse.
Once we take a human birth, our
destiny is shaped by karma. In the Bhagavad-gita (8.3) Krishna succinctly
defines karma as “actions pertaining to the development of material bodies.”
This means that there are actions we do now that determine our future material
births. What kind of actions? Those motivated by material desire. We may do them
directly for ourselves or indirectly for our extended self—our family, friends,
community, nation, and the like. And such acts sentence us to future births in
the material world, there to reap what we have sown.
Karma is of two kinds: good and
bad.
Every civilized society
recognizes a set of commandments that have divine authority and that regulate
material enjoyment. Such commandments, for example, restrict the enjoyment of
sex to marital relations and oblige the wealthy to be philanthropic. They also
encourage religious and charitable acts, which earn the performer merit. And
they prescribe atonements for transgressors. Thus people are allowed to pursue
material enjoyment, but they must observe moral and religious codes. And those
who follow these codes, who live pious lives of restricted sensual pleasure,
are assured of even greater enjoyment in the life to come.
If we act according to scriptural
regulations, the Vedas tell us, we will produce good karma and in future births
enjoy the benefits of our piety. For example, if a person is born in an
aristocratic family, is beautiful, well-educated, or wealthy, he is reaping the
benefits of good karma. The Vedas also tell us that if a person is
extraordinarily pious he may be reborn on one of the higher planets in this
universe, where the standard of sensual pleasure is far greater than anything
we have on earth.
Conversely, there is bad karma.
We create bad karma when we disregard scriptural injunctions and restrictions
in our pursuit of sense pleasure—that is, when we act sinfully. Bad karma
brings us suffering and misfortune, such as birth in a degraded family, poverty,
chronic disease, legal problems, or physical ugliness. Exceptionally bad karma
will take us into animal bodies or down to lower planets of hellish torment.
The law of karma is as strict,
relentless, and impartial as the grosser natural laws of motion and gravity.
And, like them, it applies to us whether we know about it or not. For example,
if I eat the flesh of animals even though I can live as well without it, my bad
karma will force me to be born as an animal and to be slaughtered myself. Or if
I arrange to have a child killed in the womb, I simultaneously arrange for
myself to be killed in the same way, again and again, without ever seeing the
light of day.
So when you and I were born we
inherited, along with our blue eyes or our black hair, the consequences of our
past good and bad deeds. We have a long history, and the happiness and distress
our lives will bring is set. We are indeed children of destiny, hostages to
fortune, but it is a destiny we created for ourselves, a fortune self-made. And
in this life we are continuing to create our future.
But of all this Kushner is
unaware, and he can make no sense of his suffering. He has the unshakable
conviction that God owes him an agreeable and happy life, that God is obliged
to arrange matters for his satisfaction. But God fails, bringing on Kushner’s
crisis of faith. It can only be that God is either bad or weak, Kushner
reasons, and then settles for weakness.
Yet in spite of Kushner, God is
both all-good and all- powerful. But He does not engineer our suffering—we do.
We are the authors of our karma. And it is our decision, not His, that brings
us down into the material world, into the realm of suffering.
So the answer to the question
“Why do bad things happen to good people?” is “They don’t.” All of us here in
the material world are—how shall I put it?—not of the best sort. Reprobates and
scapegraces—each of us persona non grata in the kingdom of God. We are sent
here because we seek a life independent of God, and He grants our desire as far
as possible. But since His position is already taken, we can only play at being
God while deceiving ourselves that we are independent of Him.
At the same time, the material
world reforms us, teaches us through reward and punishment to acknowledge God’s
supreme position. For by natural law we are rationed out the pleasures we
desire according to our observance of the divine regulations, following the
ways of good karma. The practice of good karma, then, amounts to a materially
motivated religion, an observance of God’s orders on the inducement of material
reward. By this practice, spanning many lifetimes, I may, it is hoped, become
habituated to following God’s commands and reconciled to His supremacy.
Thereupon I become eligible at last to take up the pure and eternal religion,
in which, completely free of all material desires, I serve God in loving
devotion, asking nothing in return. This religion, called bhakti in the Vedas,
causes my return to the kingdom of God. The acts of bhakti are karmaless: they
produce no future material births, good or bad.
From the Vedas, then, we learn of
two clearly distinct religions, one pure and the other impure. Practicing good
karma can elevate us in the material world, secure for us a vast life span on
heavenly planets, and so on. In other words, it can make us first-class inmates
of the material world. But bhakti alone can release us from the prison
altogether. Even the best karma cannot free us from suffering, as Krishna warns
in the Bhagavad- gita (8.16): “From the highest planet in the material world
down to the lowest, all are places of misery where repeated birth and death
take place.” But bhakti destroys all karmic reaction, extirpates all material
desires, revives our pure love for God, and delivers us beyond birth and death
to His abode. There we never taste temporary, material pleasure but rather
relish eternal, spiritual bliss by serving Krishna and thus joining in His
bliss.
It is a signal virtue of the
Vedic tradition that it distinguishes so clearly between the religion of good
karma and the religion of bhakti and offers bhakti purely, without compromise.
Most of us, whether Catholic, Protestant, or Jew, have been taught a kind of
common karmic religion: God has put us on this earth to enjoy ourselves, and if
we do so within the ordained limits, not forgetting to show God gratitude and
proper respect. He will see to our success. We should ask God to meet our needs
and fulfill our lawful desires, for He is the greatest order supplier. If we
are observant and good, He will reward us well in this life and even better in
the next.
This is the religion Kushner
professed: “Like most people, my wife and I had grown up with an image of God
as an all-wise, all-powerful parent figure who would treat us as our earthly
parents did, or even better. If we were obedient and deserving, He would reward
us. If we got out of line, He would discipline us, reluctantly but firmly. He
would protect us from being hurt or from hurting ourselves, and would see to it
that we got what we deserved in life.”
Of course, Kushner begins to
reconsider his religion when he discovers that it doesn’t work. At this point,
most people (like the marble contractor) become atheists. The idea of God as
order supplier is thus responsible for a great deal of unbelief. But Kushner
wants to preserve his faith in God, or at least in God’s goodness, by denying
His power.
Kushner’s chief defense of his
position is that it is “religiously adequate,” that is, comforting. You will
recall that he accused conventional theodicy of making people feel
worse—causing them to feel guilty and to hate God. The explanation of suffering
I have presented shouldn’t make anyone feel worse. True, it says that we cause
our own suffering, yet the point is not to make us feel guilty. The point is to
let us know we’ve made some mistakes and should correct them. And why should we
resent God for our suffering? Suffering comes by the law of karma. But karma is
the impartial working of causal law. Hostility toward God is what has put us under
that law; it certainly won’t help us get out. For His part, God is making every
effort to get us out: He comes to this world from time to time to teach the
path of bhakti, which will destroy all our karma. He sends His representatives
throughout the world on the same mission, and He even stays with us as the
indwelling Supersoul during our sojurn in the material world, ready to give us
the intelligence to approach Him when we put aside our ancient enmity.
Kushner has the right instincts:
he too would like people to cease their enmity toward God, and he even
recognizes the ignobility of worshiping Him on the condition that He satisfy
our demands. But if only we recognize God’s limitations, he says, we won’t be
angry at Him when things go wrong in our life, nor will we worship Him for the
satisfaction of our desires. Kushner thus urges the religious adequacy of his
own theodicy.
But it is far from adequate.
Kushner’s problem is that he cannot overcome the conditioning of karmic
religion. He needs something more spiritually powerful than good instincts to
free him from the implicit hostility toward God, the unconscious, deep-seated
unwillingness to serve Him unconditionally, that binds the conditioned soul to
karma.
Kushner is still hostile. Because
God did not satisfy his demands, Kushner must think of Him as ineffectual and
weak. Kushner once thought of God as a parent who always gratifies our desires.
But now Kushner views Him as needing our forgiveness—for having failed as a
parent: “Are you capable of forgiving and loving God even when you have found
out that He is not perfect, even when He has let you down and disappointed you
by permitting bad luck and sickness and cruelty in His world, and permitting
some of those things to happen to you? Can you learn to love and forgive Him
despite His limitations ... as you once learned to forgive and love your
parents even though they were not as wise, as strong, or as perfect as you
needed them to be?”
Kushner asserts that his
hostility toward God is no more, but what he has really done is simply change
the form in which it is expressed—from rage to condescension. And this idea of
God will only support our unwillingness to acknowledge His supremacy, and thus
it will help keep us in the material world, where we will continue to suffer.
Thus Kushner’s theodicy will not make us feel better; it will only make us feel
worse.
Furthermore, if we think God weak
and ineffectual, it is certain that we will not be able to surrender to Him
fully and serve Him without any personal consideration. The condition that
makes such service and surrender possible is His promise of complete
protection. “Declare it boldly,” Krishna tells His disciple Arjuna, “My devotee
never perishes” (Bg. 9.31). Because we can depend upon God completely, we can
surrender to Him completely: “Abandon all varieties of religion and just
surrender unto Me. I shall deliver you from all sinful reactions. Therefore you
have nothing to fear” (Bg. 18.66).
If we accept Kushner, we will
always have to look out for ourselves; we will have to act for our own sake,
and so we will remain involved with karma. Our service to God will never be
total and unconditional. Indeed, as long as we insist on taking care of
ourselves, God will leave us to our own devices.
But if we accept Krishna, if we
give up independent action and depend completely on God, devoting all our
effort to His service, He will take complete care of us. We shouldn’t expect
God to remove all inconvenience, but if difficulty comes we should simply
tolerate it, recognizing that our residual bad karma is playing itself out, and
continue to expect God’s mercy.
God will minimize the karmic
reaction due us, but the ultimate way He protects us is by bestowing spiritual
consciousness upon us and destroying the ignorance by which we identify
ourselves with matter. Krishna describes that consciousness in the
Bhagavad-gita (6.22-23): “In that joyous state, one is situated in boundless
transcendental happiness and enjoys himself through transcendental senses… .
Being situated in such a position, one is never shaken even in the midst of the
greatest difficulty. This, indeed, is actual freedom from all miseries arising
from material contact.” God frees us not so that we can goof off, not so we can
get some “reward,” but so that we can serve Him wholeheartedly, without any
other concern.
So if we accept Krishna, we can
solve the problem of evil. That solution doesn’t lie in rejecting either the
goodness or the power of God, but rather in taking advantage of that goodness
and power to perform pure devotional service—and in that way end all our
suffering forever.
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