A Mormon Theodicy: Jacob and the Problem of Evil

Title

A Mormon Theodicy: Jacob and the Problem of Evil

Publication Type

Journal Article

Year of Publication

2015

Authors

Larsen, Val (Primary)

Journal

Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship

Pagination

239-266

Volume

15

Terms of use

Items in the BMC Archive are made publicly available for non-commercial, private use. Inclusion within the BMC Archive does not imply endorsement. Items do not represent the official views of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints or of Book of Mormon Central.

Bibliographic Citation

Abstract

Lehi’s son Jacob was troubled by a great theological mystery of his and our day — the problem of evil. If God is both all good and all-powerful, how is it possible for the world to be so full of human and natural evils? Jacob was able to elicit from the Lord responses to the question of why He permits evil to flourish in this world. The Lord elucidates the perennial problem of evil for Jacob and us in three distinct genres and at three different levels of abstraction: at a metaphysical level in a philosophical patriarchal blessing, at a concrete level in the history of the emerging Nephite political economy, and in the Allegory of the Olive Tree.

Politics
Theodicy
Patriarchal Blessing
Allegory of the Olive Tree
Jacob (Son of Lehi)

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