Wow. This is so relevant to right now. I believe one thing that may have brought on my current acute symptoms (20 years after abuse and neglect), is that recently I've resolved many questions I had that were interfering with my having a real faith - rather than a belief in God and intellectual belief in the Christian tenants.
I grew up in a fundamentalist Christian home. I do not at all blame that sect, faith system, or God, for what happened in that household, and how it went unnoticed in the community of faith for nearly fifteen years.
Okay, I do sort of "blame" fundamentalism for that. That would take quite a long explanation, which I'd be happy to share, if anyone shared the experience of abuse within a clueless religious community.
It does tie in generally with my overall personal insights that helped me with the "problem of God."
So it looks like this, right?
God is love.
God is all-powerful.
God is perfectly just (ie, he knows everything and never makes a mistake in his judgement).
We are already seeing some issues here, I'm sure. ;)
This leaves out the question of the fate of humankind in eternity, which is a whole nother can of worms.
And yet, for me, it turned out the answer did lay in that other can of worms.
God is love eternally, unchanging.
Because love *is* God, and he is making everything that is, in love, that love can never change.
God will never unlove/unmake that which he loves/makes
What God made from the beginning of time was good, but in his love he intended to see it mature and improve.
Humans were intended as, and still are, his chosen partners in that process of maturation.
The human side of that relationship has not lived up to that ideal, with the exception of one person in history.
Within the last three points emerge our suffering. The world, meaning the physical world, isn't done (so I have understood). In its immature state, nature lashes out wildly to achieve balance, from sunspots to reversals of the magnetic poles.
See next post - I'm having wacky visual disturbances and hit "post" instead of touching a word to insert a letter. That post was getting gigantic anyway.