A PHILOSOPHICAL EVALUATION ON THE EXISTENCE OF GOD AND THE PROBLEM OF EVIL
Background of the Study: For centuries, people have sought a solution to the conundrum of the existence of a supernatural deity who is almighty and omni-benevolent but permits evil to exist (Manyx 2019). Three intellectual demands may be seen to be served by belief in a supernatural deity. It provides an explanation for the world's existence and nature, assurance that life is worthwhile, a solution to the issue of how one should live, and the ultimate fate of human beings. However, Manyx emphasizes that logically, it does not provide an answer to the dilemma of a deity who is so strong and completely benevolent that he allows a bigger quantity of evil to exist at the same time. Why would a higher amount of wickedness make God's existence less plausible than a lower amount? Any amount of evil, presumably, is a difficulty for the existence of an omnipotent and omni-benevolent god. However, most modern opponents accept that an omnipotent and omni-benevolent deity would have a morally adequate reason to allow some evil, or at least some seeming evil. That is, they may or may not be gratuitous. However, the more evil there is, the more probable it is that at least part of it is gratuitous, and hence the less likely it is that the God of conventional theism exists ( Akinyemi 2016).
Thus, the evidential issue of evil, which is the difficulty of deciding whether the existence of evil provides proof against the existence of God and, if so, to what amount. This is to suggest that a being perfect in power, wisdom, and goodness allows evil to exist concurrently. The evidentiary arguments from evil aim to demonstrate that, if any evidence for God's existence is set aside, it becomes exceedingly implausible that the universe was created and is ruled by an omnipotent, omniscient, and entirely benevolent entity. As Akinyemi emphasizes, there are certain facts about evil that cannot be adequately explained by a theistic account of the world. Theism is thus treated as a large-scale hypothesis, or explanatory theory, that aims to make sense of some relevant facts and is disproven to the extent that it fails to do so (Akinyemi 2016). As a result, it is evident that the dilemma of God and the presence of evil is a philosophical one.
Orthodox theism gives to God traits that appear to contradict our perception of reality. In orthodox theism, God is thought to exist as ONE, and they maintained an anthropomorphic image of God as PERFECT, the highest of all beings. According to St. Anselm, God is the highest entity that can be imagined (Anselm, 117, 1979). This being has a number of characteristics, including being all powerful (Job. 42:2), which refers to God being able to prompt any state of affairs that must abide by logic rules; that it must be logically possible in itself while also being logically consistent with other essential characteristics of God.
Omnipresent God (Jeremiah 23: 23-24), who is fully present in all space and time, is everywhere at the same time, and so everything occurs in His presence. Omni-benevolent (completely good) (1Jn 1:9, Jr. 12:1) is regarded to be the source of moral principle; hence, he is the centre of all moral rules and acts in accordance with them. He intends for the same good to be reflected in His creation at all times. Omniscient God (all-knowing) has knowledge of the past, present, and future, and everything that occurs is pre-planned by Him. Incorporeal (Jn 4:23-24) refers to God as a disembodied actor, implying that He is a spiritual entity capable of influencing physical entities.
Aseity (Ps 90:1-4, Jn 5:26) suggests that God is immutable from eternity to eternity. This implies that God has His own essence or existence. His existence is ontologically autonomous, as it is not dependent on any external reality.
Creator and sustainer (Gn. 1-2), He is regarded as the creator and sustainer of all that is visible and invisible. Because he grants everything that exists the ability to exist, nothing can come into existence without his will. And because power to be derives from Him, it follows that operational power also comes from Him (Gerald 2015). Thus, the name God, with the traits described above, is used to designate the Supreme Being claimed by theistic believers.