Psalm 89 and the logical problem of evil: A comparative-philosophical perspective

This study takes as its starting point the consensus in research on the relationship between divine attributes and suffering in Psalm 89 which holds that some of the beliefs expressed in verses 39–52 contradict those in 1–38(53). In an attempt to address a related gap in the research in a new and s...

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Main Author: Jaco Gericke
Format: Article
Language:Afrikaans
Published: OTSSA 2021-05-01
Series:Old Testament Essays
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ote-journal.otwsa-otssa.org.za/index.php/journal/article/view/437
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spelling doaj-e7985daad0764cd4ba4313f008665d5c2021-06-09T11:58:11ZafrOTSSAOld Testament Essays1010-99192312-36212021-05-01341Psalm 89 and the logical problem of evil: A comparative-philosophical perspectiveJaco Gericke0North-West University (Vaal Campus) Faculty of Theology Ancient Texts and Culture This study takes as its starting point the consensus in research on the relationship between divine attributes and suffering in Psalm 89 which holds that some of the beliefs expressed in verses 39–52 contradict those in 1–38(53). In an attempt to address a related gap in the research in a new and supplementary way, a comparative-philosophical perspective is offered regarding the reasoning operative within the Psalm’s associated religious language. As counterpart, the so-called “Logical Problem of Evil” (LPE) in analytic philosophy of religion was identified. Conceptual and correlation-relations in Psalm 89 are clarified through correlation and contrast. The study argues that the logical status of the beliefs involved, as contradiction, makes more sense if interpreted as part of the protocol when prayer and poetry have to satisfy the conditions of a possible atheodicy. Thus, restating the Psalm’s associated content on its own terms, even if not in them, contributes to our understanding of why certain states of affairs in the world of the text are the way they are, or why they are at all. https://doi.org/10.17159/2312–3621/2021/v34n1a17 https://ote-journal.otwsa-otssa.org.za/index.php/journal/article/view/437Psalm 89, suffering, divine attributes, comparative philosophy (of religion), problem of evil, atheodicy
collection DOAJ
language Afrikaans
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jaco Gericke
spellingShingle Jaco Gericke
Psalm 89 and the logical problem of evil: A comparative-philosophical perspective
Old Testament Essays
Psalm 89, suffering, divine attributes, comparative philosophy (of religion), problem of evil, atheodicy
author_facet Jaco Gericke
author_sort Jaco Gericke
title Psalm 89 and the logical problem of evil: A comparative-philosophical perspective
title_short Psalm 89 and the logical problem of evil: A comparative-philosophical perspective
title_full Psalm 89 and the logical problem of evil: A comparative-philosophical perspective
title_fullStr Psalm 89 and the logical problem of evil: A comparative-philosophical perspective
title_full_unstemmed Psalm 89 and the logical problem of evil: A comparative-philosophical perspective
title_sort psalm 89 and the logical problem of evil: a comparative-philosophical perspective
publisher OTSSA
series Old Testament Essays
issn 1010-9919
2312-3621
publishDate 2021-05-01
description This study takes as its starting point the consensus in research on the relationship between divine attributes and suffering in Psalm 89 which holds that some of the beliefs expressed in verses 39–52 contradict those in 1–38(53). In an attempt to address a related gap in the research in a new and supplementary way, a comparative-philosophical perspective is offered regarding the reasoning operative within the Psalm’s associated religious language. As counterpart, the so-called “Logical Problem of Evil” (LPE) in analytic philosophy of religion was identified. Conceptual and correlation-relations in Psalm 89 are clarified through correlation and contrast. The study argues that the logical status of the beliefs involved, as contradiction, makes more sense if interpreted as part of the protocol when prayer and poetry have to satisfy the conditions of a possible atheodicy. Thus, restating the Psalm’s associated content on its own terms, even if not in them, contributes to our understanding of why certain states of affairs in the world of the text are the way they are, or why they are at all. https://doi.org/10.17159/2312–3621/2021/v34n1a17
topic Psalm 89, suffering, divine attributes, comparative philosophy (of religion), problem of evil, atheodicy
url https://ote-journal.otwsa-otssa.org.za/index.php/journal/article/view/437
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