
Contents
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Tanakhic Theodicy, the Agapic God, and Christian Theology Tanakhic Theodicy, the Agapic God, and Christian Theology
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Early Paradigms: St Patrick and Beowulf Early Paradigms: St Patrick and Beowulf
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Reading Evil, Experiencing Love Reading Evil, Experiencing Love
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The Concretizing of Evil and the Development of Theodicy in Pre-Miltonic Poets The Concretizing of Evil and the Development of Theodicy in Pre-Miltonic Poets
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Beyond Milton Beyond Milton
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Works Cited Works Cited
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41 Evil and The God of Love
Get accessEric Ziolkowski is the Charles A. Dana Professor of Religious Studies and Head of the Religious Studies Department, Lafayette College, Pennsylvania.
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Published:02 September 2009
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Abstract
Posed by the character Philo in David Hume's Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion, questions about God that find their source in Epicurus crystallize the traditional philosophical understanding of the problem of evil. This problem – whether evoked by a case of natural evil; epitomized by the Lisbon earthquake of 1755 or the South Asian tsunami of 2004; or of moral evil, epitomized by the Shoah – poses a grave challenge to conventional theism and is deemed ‘the guiding force of modern thought’. This article examines the thematic relation between evil and the God of love in English literature, the theme's roots in the Bible, conceived as a unified ‘literary’ document. It is in this sense that the Hebrew Bible or Tanakh furnished for Jack Miles his best-selling God: A Biography.
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