Designed for students and scholars alike, this book reinvigorates stalled debates in philosophy and theology through a detailed reassessment of the problem of evil and the task of theodicy and through a careful analysis of the major models and motifs in theodicy.
This is a super clear, strong and brief introduction to the problem of evil in a providential world from a Christian perspective that honours the depth of human experience of suffering as well as the mystery of God in the world, while offering an integrative, holistic approach to the riddle of the universe.
This is an introduction into five major types of approaches to the question of evil: Free Will Defense (evil exists because God allows free will), Soul-Making Theodicy (God uses evil/suffering to grow/develop good), Process Theodicy (removes divine omnipotence and based on the philosophical model of Whitehead), Cruciform theodicy (Bonhoeffer/Moltmann and others, not so much an answer to the origin of evil as a belief of God's presence in the space with the sufferers), and Antitheodicy (a couple of moral or philosophical objections tot he question. Mark S.M. Scott in this work doesn't present an alternative or combination of these perspectives although he does provide some positive and negative aspects of each pathway in the theodicy question.