Zarathushtrian Theodicy
From http://www.vohuman.org/Articles/Zarathushtrian%20Theodicy.htm
Theodicy is the branch of theology dedicated to understanding the
problem of evil, that is, why evil exists in a world governed by
a good, wise, and powerful god. Over the centuries, Persian thought
has addressed this question more thoroughly than any other religious
tradition. Several of the understandings arrived at within the greater
Zoroastrian tradition will be discussed and compared with the thoughts
of other religious traditions.
I first became intrigued by Zoroastrianism when I read of its conception
of a God, Ahura Mazda, whose goal was the eradication of evil from
the world and who asked for human assistance in reaching this goal.
I had always been troubled by the problem of evil, i.e., why an
omnipotent and omni benevolent deity would allow evil to exist.
The typical answers that I had encountered in Christianity, I found
to be unsatisfying: they did not ring true to me. Most Christian
theology worked hard to sidestep the issue, rather than to truly
grapple with this dilemma. As I studied more Persian thought, not
just orthodox Zoroastrianism, but variants such as Zarvanism and
Mazdakism, I found that the ancient Persians had attacked this problem
with more thoroughness and intellectual fearlessness than had the
Abrahamic faiths.
The problem of evil boils down to attempting to reconcile three
beliefs:
1) God is all-powerful,
2) God is entirely good,
3) Evil exists.
Any two of these statements can easily be held to be true, but
it is difficult to see how all three can be true. Human who are
good do their best to reduce evil when they can. An all-powerful
deity should be able to entirely eliminate evil.
Christianity has never produced a satisfactory solution to this
trilemma. The traditional answer has been to attribute the existence
of evil to man's free will. The argument goes as follows: God is
not entirely omnipotent, not being able to do what is self-contradictory
or logically impossible. Free will is a good thing. Allowing human
free will permits humans to be evil. Thus, evil is an unfortunate
consequence of man's free will. Since it is man, not the God, who
freely chooses to do wrong, the goodness of the God is not compromised.
There are numerous difficulties with this solution. The most striking
is that the God has become a less competent moral agent than an
individual human. I, a man, am able to actively prevent evils other
than my own. I can restrain others who are bent on doing harm. I
can work to reduce the damage done by pestilence, disease, and natural
disasters. If such good deeds are good when I do them, how can it
not be good for the God to do the same, only more competently?
One answer is to deny that the God is good. This belief was implicitly
held by most of the ancient Jews who insisted that the God brings
both good and evil. But why should an amoral deity be worthy of
worship? It would seem that the standard of righteousness itself
is more worthy of worship than is such a deity.
The other straightforward answer is to deny that the God is all-powerful.
This was the answer of Sassanian Zoroastrianism. By the Sassanian
period, Ahura Mazda and Spenta Mainyu had become regarded as the
same entity, Ormuzd. Angra Mainya, the dark twin of Spenta Mainyu,
now as Ahriman, became elevated to the same stature as the God,
Ormuzd. Ahriman was nearly as powerful as Ormuzd. In time and with
man's help, Ormuzd would prevail, but here and now Ormuzd was not
sufficiently powerful to eliminate evil.
Early Christianity, being greatly influenced by Zoroastrianism,
frequently, though inconsistently, invoked this solution. Satan,
an angel who was originally God's attorney general, becomes seen
as the God's adversary. This belief is still held by most fundamentalist
Protestant Christians, who generally avoid noting that allowing
the free reign of such a rogue angel cannot be a good act on the
part of the God.
Sassanian metaphysics easily solved the problem of evil, the forces
of good and evil being on an equal footing; but in doing so it produced
other theological problems. Being on an equal footing, good and
evil become distinct, but logically similar standards. Thus in Sassanian
Zoroastrian there are seen to be seven archdemons, the evil counterparts
of each of the Amesha Spenta.
This doesn't work, particularly for the case of Asha Vahishta.
Asha Vahishta is the personification of truth and righteousness.
There is no standard of falsehood; there is simply the failure to
adhere to the standard of truth. Asha has no dark twin. Similarly,
there is no reasonable counterpart to Vohu Mana. The opposite of
mindfulness is similarly a vacancy, the failure to be mindful. Unless
one accepts that Asha, the standard of righteousness, is logically
prior to the dichotomy of good and evil, there is no basis for choosing
the way of Asha over that of the equivalent shadow minister of Ahriman.
In addition, the existence of two spirits, mirror images of one
another, logically implies some common source. This source then
becomes the more basic principle, logically prior to either Ormuzd
or Ahriman. This was the point recognized by the Zervanists, who
posited Zurvan (Time) as the parent of these twins. This corrected
the logical flaw introduced when Ahura Mazda was reduced to the
level of Angra Mainyu as a result of his identification with Spenta
Mainyu. They also intuitively recognized a fact that modern scientific
understanding would support: destruction and time are inherently
intertwined.
The ancient Persians had another insight as well about the nature
of evil: evil is not creative. This point was stressed most firmly
by the Mazdakians who insisted that the actions of evil were not
directed, but random.
I find this insight particularly instructive in understanding what
is known in the philosophical community as "natural evil". This
term refers to bad things that happen that cannot be reasonably
explained as a result of human misbehavior. Examples are misfortunes
such as birth defects, epidemics, and natural disasters such as
tornadoes. Such things are responsible for great human suffering.
Unlike human evil, this evil acts blindly. One is in the wrong place
at the wrong time and suffers.
Some insight can be gained by considering the case of a tornado.
Suppose I were to show you a movie of a tornado bearing down upon
a building and reducing it to rubble. This is a tragedy, but not
a surprising one; this is what tornadoes do. One the other hand,
suppose I show you a movie in which a tornado runs across a pile
of rubble and erects it into a building. You would know that you
had been tricked; the movie was being shown backwards.
The pile of rubble being erected into a building by the tornado
would break no physical conservation laws. All the necessary material
is there. Mass and energy conservation are not violated. But still,
this kind of thing just doesn't happen (or happens so rarely that
it is effectively impossible). The reason is that entropy, the scientific
measure of disorder, always increases. When items are arranged randomly,
the chances of them creating an ordered structure, such as a building,
are tiny. Anything that randomly rearranges items will tend to increase
the disorder.
Natural evils are of the same character. They do damage by random
disruption, not directed cruelty. For this reason, many people do
not like to attach the term "evil" to such occurrences. But one
must admit that they are unfortunate and cause much suffering. I
tend to refer to them as evil, for if this is not the case, human
attempts to reduce unfortunate natural occurrences cannot be seen
as good; and I think that they are good.
Time's direction, and even existence, implies the increase in entropy,
and thus the existence of natural evil. Without time, good and evil
have no meaning; and without natural evil, time cannot exist. Only
in the temporal, getig, world can the spiritual, menog, conflict
be played out.
Human evil is less problematic. Zarathushtra continually rails
against the violence and cruelty he sees around him. He calls upon
people to choose righteousness. But few people willfully choose
to be evil. They simply fail to exercise their good minds to choose
good. Human evil is also basically a disordered condition, a failure
of the moral faculty, not an active seeking of the wrong. Zarathushtra
recognizes this in Yasna 30.3, where he contrasts the natures of
good and bad people. He does not say, "The good choose virtuously,
the evil choose wickedly." Instead he notes, "The good choose wisely,
the evil do not." The failure to make moral choice is the root problem.
It remains to later Persian thought for this insight to be more
fully developed.
Unlike many other religions, in Zoroastrianism, history has a purpose,
the elimination of evil from the world. In orthodox Zoroastrianism,
the origin of evil is somewhat vague, other than that good and evil
are coeval, that they both were there in the beginning of things,
and together they brought about the world we know. Zervanism carried
this one step further, seeing the existence of the world, good,
and evil as an act of divine purgation. The Godhead becomes perfect
by purging itself of evil. In doing so It temporarily loses Its
omnipotence but will regain it at the end of days. This divine purgation
is the reason for the existence of the universe. This advanced metaphysical
conception was not to be rediscovered until the time of the late
medieval Jewish Kabbalists.
This is also in line with what is now known as Process Theology,
the understanding of the Divine not as static perfection, but as
a growing, active reality. All is not yet well, but all will be
well in the fullness of time. Frasho-kereti is not yet here, but
it will come. This, for me, has proven to be the most reasonable
understanding of this age-old theological problem. |