St. Augustine's Response To The Existence Of God

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A Problem of evil is the Acceptance of the assumption that God does not exist in the minds of atheists. Atheists argued that should God exit, then a pious person, such as Job in the Biblical Book of Job, who kept his faith in God, should not have suffered miserably from undeserved evil on earth. To support this statement, Job’s friend, Eliphaz suggested that the problem of Evil emanated from man and did not spring from the earth and that man is born to trouble. The religion of Manichaeism asserted that there must have been two gods-one of good god and one of evil god. The good god is the god of soul and mind which is immortal and eternal. This assumption was supported by St. Augustine in the seventeen and eighteen centuries. St. Augustine changed his position by postulating that there was only one God who was all-powerful and all-knowing. Clearly, theists fully believe that they can prove the existence of one universal God whom the Atheist’s fully deny. …show more content…
The theists went on to say that the Existence of God could be postulated on three dimensions, namely, design arguments, cosmological arguments and the arguments from morality. The design arguments consist of the argument from fine-tuning, that is the universe was created just perfectly well for human existence and the existence of all organisms that support the existence of humanity. The problem of evil was strongly supported by Spinoza’s Pantheism and the German philosophers Johann Fichte and G.W.F. Hegel in which all postulated that the concept of God is identical to the universe, and that God was not the Creator of Universe. Further, Voltaire, a French philosopher explained that God was just a “hypothesis”, a creator who only turned on the giant Newtonian machine and left it to fend for

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