I'm referring to Carlo Alvaro's paper The “Heaven Ab Initio” Argument from Evil:
HAIAFE (“Heaven Ab Initio” Argument from Evil):
- As a perfect being, God’s goal is to create free-willed creatures that choose to love God and forever exist with him in a state of eternal bliss.
- An omnibenevolent God would want to create free-willed beings in a state of eternal bliss devoid of evil if he could and if evil and suffering were unnecessary.
- An omnipotent God can create free-willed beings directly in a spiritual state of eternal bliss devoid of evil.
- However, God created physical creatures in a physical world that is full of unnecessary evil and suffering.
- Therefore, God is either not omnipotent, not omniscient, or not perfectly good.
(A possible extended conclusion: 6. Therefore, there exists a deistic god that created the universe, but this god is not a person who willfully created the world or that has a relationship with humans. Hence, god cannot prevent or eliminate evil and suffering).
In short, Alvaro argues that there is a way for God to create free-willed beings that can grow morally without ever experiencing evil. The option is for God to create free-willed beings directly in a spiritual form in a non-physical state of eternal bliss. In such a state, there are no objects of temptation, and by directly creating spiritual beings, God can eliminate carnal pleasure, which is the root of lust and evil and suffering. This, therefore, precisely demonstrates that “There is no morally sufficient reason for God to allow instances of evil” and, a fortiori, it shows that the God of classical theism does not exist.
How do Christians rebut Carlo Alvaro's position?
Alvaro anticipated and responded to a few responses to his argument:
The Freedom Objective:
A strong objection to God’s creating free creatures directly in heaven concerns freedom of choice. Namely, one might concede that God can create free-willed creatures directly in heaven and even that many of them might live happy lives in heaven. However, if God created his children directly in heaven, essentially, he would force them to accept such an eternal life without giving them a choice.
The “Morally Good Reason”:
First, the theist can reply that even if the HAIAFE is valid, in the end, it is not possible to know God’s mind. Additionally, for all we know, it might turn out that God has morally good reasons for creating humans the way he did. Perhaps, when time comes and we meet him, God will explain to us why he did not create us directly in heaven.
The “Resurrection of the Body”:
Concerning our resurrecting in heaven with a physical body, not all theists believe that this is true. Even if it is assumed that it is, it does not undermine the HAIAFE.
So I am particularly interested in other responses to Alvaro's argument.