If God is good, why is there suffering and evil?
The short answer
This is the hardest question anyone can ask, and the Church does not pretend it has a tidy formula. Christianity does not explain suffering away; it answers it with a person. God permits evil — never causes moral evil — because he made creatures genuinely free and a world still in motion, and because he is powerful and good enough to draw a greater good out of even the worst things. The clearest proof that he has not abandoned us to it is that he entered it himself, on the cross.
Full explanation
It is worth admitting at the start how strong this objection really is. A loving, all-powerful God and a world full of cancer wards, betrayals, earthquakes, and cruelty seem hard to hold in the same hand. Many people lose their faith here, and not because they are shallow — because they are paying attention. Any honest answer has to feel the weight of the question before it offers anything. The Church has never claimed to possess a single sentence that makes a grieving parent's pain make sense.
The first thing Catholic teaching says is what it does not say. It does not say God authors evil. Everything God made is good; evil is not a created "thing" but a lack, a wound, a good that has been spoiled — like rust is not a substance but iron going wrong, or a shadow is not an object but the absence of light. Much of the world's evil is moral evil: it comes from free creatures choosing against love. God could have prevented it only by un-making freedom itself — by building a world of puppets who could not betray because they could not choose. A love that cannot be refused is not love. So real freedom carries real risk, and the abuse of that freedom is on us, not on him.
But that does not cover everything. Earthquakes and disease and the slow failures of a still-developing universe are not anyone's sin. Here Catholic thought speaks of a creation that is, in a sense, on the way — good but not yet finished, moving toward a completion it has not reached. Picture a symphony being composed in real time, with dissonant passages that are genuinely painful in the moment but are not the last word and are not meaningless within the whole. We are inside the unfinished music, unable yet to hear how it resolves. That is not a proof; it is a reason not to assume that present pain equals final pointlessness.
The deepest Christian answer, though, is not an argument at all. When God finally addressed human suffering, he did not send an explanation down from a safe distance — he climbed into it. The cross is God himself, innocent, tortured, abandoned, dying. Whatever else this means, it means God is not a spectator of our pain. He knows it from the inside. And because Jesus rose, the Christian claim is that suffering, while still horrific, is no longer the end of the story: God can take the very worst — an execution — and make it the doorway to life. That is the pattern Christians stake their hope on: not a God who prevents every wound, but a God who refuses to let any wound have the final say.
None of this is meant to hand someone in agony a neat reason for it. To a person in the dark, the Church offers presence, lament (the Psalms are full of honest protest), and the promise that they are not alone in it. The "why" may not be answered this side of heaven. The "who is with me" is.
Why this matters
How a person answers this question shapes whether they can trust God at all. If suffering means God is either powerless or unkind, faith collapses. The Catholic response keeps both truths alive: God is genuinely good and evil is genuinely real and genuinely awful — it is not an illusion or secretly a blessing in disguise. That balance lets a believer grieve honestly without despairing, and fight evil (sickness, injustice, cruelty) as something God hates too, rather than shrugging at it as "his plan."
Myth Common misunderstanding
A common misreading is that Christians believe "everything happens for a reason" in the sense that God deliberately arranges each tragedy as a tool. The Church does not teach that God sends evil. It teaches that God permits what he could prevent, and is able to bring good out of it — which is very different from causing it. A drunk driver killing a child is not God's will; God's grace can later bring redemption out of the wreckage, but he did not order the crash. Confusing "God can redeem this" with "God wanted this" turns the Father into the author of the very evil he came to defeat.
Scripture connections
- Genesis 1:31 — God surveys creation and calls it "very good," establishing that evil is a corruption of an originally good world, not part of its design.
- Romans 8:28 — God works all things toward good for those who love him; not that all things are good, but that none are beyond his power to redeem.
- Job 38:1-4 — God answers Job's anguish not with an explanation but with the vastness of his wisdom, a reminder of how much we cannot yet see.
- Isaiah 55:8-9 — God's thoughts are higher than ours, framing the limits of our vantage point on suffering.
- 1 Peter 4:12-13 — believers are told to expect suffering and to find in it a share in Christ's own, not a sign of abandonment.
Church teaching references
Reflect
When you have suffered, did it change things more to receive an explanation, or to know someone was truly with you in it — and what might that tell you about how God chooses to answer?