The Real Problem of Evil: Not Evidence for God, But Against One

This post is part of our ongoing series responding to The Problem of God by Mark Clark. We’re moving chapter by chapter, examining Clark’s arguments through the lens of evidence, reason, and what we call The God Question—a philosophy that begins not with belief, but with curiosity. Our goal is not to mock or belittle, but to critically and thoughtfully respond to the claims made, helping readers engage with the deeper issues beneath the surface.


🔍 Clark’s Opening Framing: An Appeal to Emotion

Mark Clark begins Chapter 5 by asserting that “this is the most personal chapter in the book.” That immediately tells us that emotion will drive much of the content that follows. And sure enough, it does.

He recounts personal pain—his mother’s cancer and death, his own physical suffering from a degenerative disease, and emotional abuse by his father. These are real, powerful, and humanizing experiences. But Clark attempts to move from the universality of suffering to a very specific conclusion:

Suffering is not evidence against God, but a reason we need Him.

This is the central move of the chapter. And it deserves close examination.


🧠 The Bait-and-Switch of Emotional Authority

Clark’s argument operates like this:

  1. We all suffer.
  2. I’ve suffered too.
  3. So let me tell you what suffering means.

This rhetorical sequence is powerful because it feels honest. But it also risks becoming manipulative. It subtly shuts down the deeper philosophical question—why does suffering exist at all in a universe supposedly governed by a loving, all-powerful God?—by overwhelming the reader with pathos.

The emotional groundwork makes it hard to question the logic without seeming cold or heartless. But we must question it.


❓Is Suffering Really a “Reason We Need God”?

Clark claims that suffering doesn’t negate God’s existence. Instead, it shows our deep need for God. He writes:

“We ask for answers. God doesn’t give us answers. He gives us Himself.”

This is poetic. But it’s also hollow. It assumes that God’s silence in the face of suffering is not a problem, but a feature of divine love. In other words: God doesn’t fix it because His presence is enough.

This, of course, raises a brutal contradiction: If God is powerful and loving, why is His non-intervention framed as an act of compassion?

The better explanation may be far simpler—and far more honest: There is no divine being answering prayers or intervening at all.


🔄 Reframing the Burden of Proof

Clark tries to turn the problem around. He argues that suffering only feels like a problem for the believer—because we expect a good God to do something about it. But for the atheist, he suggests, suffering shouldn’t be a problem at all. It’s just nature playing out—no meaning, no evil, just randomness.

This is a common apologetic move: to claim that atheists “borrow” their moral outrage from Christianity.

But that’s intellectually dishonest.

Non-theistic philosophies—like secular humanism, Buddhism, or Stoicism—have deeply coherent ways of explaining and confronting suffering. These worldviews acknowledge suffering without invoking a morally culpable, invisible deity.

In fact, atheism removes the moral contradiction entirely: in a natural universe, we suffer because of biology, environment, randomness, and human cruelty—not because a benevolent cosmic Father chooses not to intervene.


🔚 Where to Pause for Now

Let’s stop here, just before Clark begins offering the classic Christian responses to suffering (i.e., free will, soul-building theodicies, and Jesus’s suffering as solidarity).

In our next post, we’ll examine those claims in detail.

Trusting God Even When It Doesn’t Make Sense?

Sunday Special Feature


At The God Question, we’ve launched a special series that responds to real-world religious messages—statements, sermons, and claims being made from pulpits and platforms across the country.

Why? Because these messages shape minds. They influence how people understand suffering, morality, identity, and truth.

This week, we’re examining a sermon titled “Trusting God Even When It Doesn’t Make Sense,” delivered on March 23, 2025, by a pastor from First Baptist Church in Boaz, Alabama.


🔹 Core Message of the Sermon:

  • Life is often painful.
  • We may not understand what God is doing, but we should trust Him anyway.
  • God is always “working behind the scenes.”
  • Trials and suffering have a divine purpose.
  • Worship and faith are the proper responses, even in despair.

🎯 The God Question Responds:

Using our core philosophy—truth-seeking through reason, evidence, and skepticism—we challenge the claims made in this sermon.


🧩 Claim 1: “God is still good even when life is hard.”

This is an emotionally appealing idea, but it lacks evidence. It assumes that suffering and divine love can coexist without contradiction, but offers no objective support for this reconciliation.

Would we call a human parent “good” if they watched their child suffer needlessly and did nothing—perhaps to “build character”?


🧩 Claim 2: “God is working behind the scenes.”

This is a non-falsifiable claim. In other words, it cannot be tested or disproven—and that makes it unreliable as truth. Believers often interpret any outcome as part of God’s invisible plan.

This is classic confirmation bias: interpreting all events as evidence of divine involvement—regardless of the outcome.


🧩 Claim 3: “Pain has a purpose; trials grow our faith.”

Some people do grow through hardship. Others collapse under it. Many abandon their faith in the face of intense suffering.

So which is it—evidence of God’s hand, or randomness of life?

If suffering grows faith, what about those who lose faith because of suffering?


🧩 Claim 4: “Worship through the pain.”

Worship can be emotionally soothing—but when paired with the idea that suffering is divinely intended, it becomes a tool for normalizing spiritual neglect.

Why praise a God whose presence is indistinguishable from absence?

If help never comes—just silence—what are we really worshiping?


💬 Why This Matters:

This message was delivered to a local congregation, including young minds who are absorbing ideas about God, truth, and how to make sense of a painful world.

We don’t question anyone’s sincerity. But sincerity isn’t the same as truth.

These ideas deserve scrutiny—not because we want to destroy faith, but because critical thinking demands it.


🙋‍♀️ Ask Yourself:

  • If God is real, all-knowing, and all-loving, why is suffering still necessary?
  • Wouldn’t a powerful God have better tools for growth than trauma?
  • If we don’t understand God’s plan, how can we be so sure there is one?

🧠 The God Question Perspective:

Faith is not a substitute for truth. And when a message tells you to trust blindly—even when it doesn’t make sense—that’s a red flag.

We challenge you to question, think, and explore.

That’s the path to truth.