The question of evil presents a profound challenge to humanity – why do we do what we know to be wrong? This is especially a challenge to religious believers. Why doesn’t an al-good and omnipotent God step in and put an end to evil? The Problem of Evil in the Western Tradition examines how Western thinkers have dealt with the problem of evil, starting in ancient Israel and tracing the question through post-biblical Judaism, Early Christianity (especially in Africa), the Middle Ages, the Renaissance, the Reformation, the Enlightenment, and to the twenty-first century when science has raised new and important issues. Joseph Kelly covers the book of Job, the book of Revelation, Augustine of Hippo, Aquinas, Luther, Maslow, Milton, Voltaire, Hume, Mary Shelley, Darwin, Jung, Flannery O’Connor, Karl Rahner, Teilhard de Chardin, and modern geneticists. Chapters are Some Perspectives on Evil,
Additional ISBNs: 9780814651049, 0814651046, 9780814683965, 0814683967


Basics of Occupational Safety, The
Aeschylus II: The Oresteia
Dissection Guide & Atlas to the Rat
McGraw-Hill Education Preparation for the GED Test
McGraw-Hill Education Social Studies Workbook for the GED Test, Second Edition
Beginning AutoCAD 2019 Exercise Workbook
50 Essays: A Portable Anthology (High School Edition): for the AP English Language Course
Cadillac Desert
Data Manipulation with R
Logic: The Essentials
CliffsNotes Praxis II: ParaPro (0755 and 1755) 
Review The Problem of Evil in the Western Tradition
There are no reviews yet.