The problem of infant suffering and death is one of the most difficult
versions of the problem of evil, especially when we consider how God can
be thought
good to the infant victims by the infant victims. In
the
first portion of this paper, I
examine two theodicies that aim to solve this problem but fail. In the
final section,
I argue that the problem can be better dealt with by maintaining not that
God must
redeem the suffering of such children, but that such children are not the
sort of
beings whose suffering God can or must redeem.
God is good, God is just, God is almighty: only a madman doubts this…
Doubtless
when their elders suffer these afflictions we are wont to say either that
their goodness
is being tested…or that their sins are being punished. But these
are older people.
Tell me what we are to answer about children!
St Augustine, in a letter to Jerome