If there is one question that has persistently challenged my evolving philosophy, it is the problem of evil. I can reconcile many things that traditional theology has struggled to explain, but evil remains the question that refuses simplistic answers. Over the years my thinking has moved away from seeing evil as the work of an all-powerful opposing force and toward understanding it within a much larger framework of consciousness, freedom, and spiritual evolution. I don't claim to have solved the mystery completely, but I do believe my research has brought me closer to an answer that is both intellectually satisfying and spiritually compassionate.
I have come to believe that reality is fundamentally
consciousness. Whether we call it God, the Tao, Brahman, the Monad, The All, or
the unified field of consciousness, I see all existence emerging from a single
foundational reality. Within that reality exist countless centers of
consciousness—what we commonly call souls. These are not puppets being
manipulated by an external deity but genuine agents possessing authentic
freedom. Without freedom there can be no authentic love, creativity, or growth.
This has led me to embrace the possibility of multiple
incarnations. I realize this idea falls outside traditional Christian
orthodoxy, but I find it increasingly compelling both philosophically and
spiritually. If consciousness survives death and continues its journey, then a
single human lifetime seems an extraordinarily limited arena in which to
understand justice, growth, and the apparent inequalities of existence.
From this perspective, I suspect that souls participate in
choosing the broad contours of their incarnations. I intentionally use the word
"participate" because I do not imagine some detached spirit casually
selecting a life of unimaginable suffering as though choosing from a menu.
Rather, I envision souls, from a perspective far beyond our present awareness,
freely entering experiences that contribute to their continuing awakening.
This is where I want to be especially careful.
Nothing in this belief should ever be used to blame those
who suffer.
When a child dies, when someone is abused, when a family
loses everything, or when a person lives with chronic illness or trauma, I
believe our first responsibility is compassion—not metaphysical explanation. To
suggest to someone in the midst of profound suffering that they somehow
"chose" their pain is not only insensitive but can become spiritually
abusive. Even if there is a larger metaphysical context beyond this life, it
offers little consolation to the person presently carrying unbearable grief.
Empathy must always come before philosophy.
The possibility that souls freely participate in multiple
incarnations is, for me, an attempt to understand the larger architecture of
reality. It is never a justification for suffering, nor an excuse to minimize
injustice. Every act of compassion remains meaningful precisely because
suffering is real. Whatever cosmic purpose may exist behind freedom, trauma is
still trauma, and evil is still evil. Love demands that we respond to it as
such.
At the same time, I find it increasingly difficult to
believe that justice can be fully understood within the boundaries of one
lifetime. Some are born into privilege, others into poverty. Some know safety
while others endure violence from their earliest memories. If consciousness
continues across many lives, then perhaps what appears radically unequal from
our present vantage point may participate in a much larger, ultimately
egalitarian journey of experience. Over countless incarnations, souls may come
to know both joy and sorrow, strength and weakness, abundance and loss. Such a
view does not erase the pain of any single lifetime, but it suggests that no
soul is eternally defined by one chapter of an infinitely larger story.
Where my thinking still encounters its greatest challenge is
the question of spiritual evil.
Human evil can be understood through freedom. We know that
people can choose selfishness, domination, cruelty, and violence. But what of
the traditions that speak of angels and demons? What are we to make of
genuinely malevolent intelligences?
My own thinking has gradually shifted here as well. I no
longer see evil as an eternal cosmic force standing opposite God in some
dualistic struggle. If foundational consciousness is truly the ground of all
being, then there cannot be two ultimate realities locked in perpetual
conflict. Love must remain more fundamental than hatred, and unity more
foundational than division.
This has led me to wonder whether what religions have called
demons may themselves be conscious beings that have become profoundly
fragmented. Rather than existing as eternally evil entities, perhaps they are
intelligences that have wandered unimaginably far from the Logos—from truth,
love, and their own deepest nature. If that is the case, then even they would
not be beyond redemption, however distant that restoration may seem from our
perspective.
This possibility resonates with both Hermetic philosophy and
Christian mysticism. The Hermetic tradition understands consciousness as
existing along a continuum of development, while the Christian mystical
tradition places the Logos at the center of creation as the principle that
ultimately draws all things toward reconciliation. My own thinking increasingly
finds itself at the intersection of these two streams.
I also find myself reconsidering the story of the Tree of
the Knowledge of Good and Evil in Genesis. Rather than seeing it simply as the
moment humanity became sinful, I increasingly wonder if it symbolizes
consciousness entering into the lived experience of polarity. Before the tree
there is innocence. After the tree comes the direct experience of both good and
evil. The Hebrew concept of "knowing" often refers to experiential
knowledge rather than mere intellectual awareness. Humanity did not simply
learn about evil; humanity entered into the experience of it.
Perhaps that is the human journey.
Not merely to return to unconscious innocence, but to pass
through the experience of duality and emerge into a higher, awakened
participation with the Divine. The goal is not to erase what has been learned,
but to integrate it through wisdom and love.
This understanding also reframes evil itself. I do not see
evil as an equal opposite to good. It is real, often devastatingly so, but I do
not believe it is ultimate. Like darkness in relation to light, or ignorance in
relation to wisdom, evil appears to be parasitic rather than foundational. It
exists as the consequence of consciousness becoming separated from its deepest
reality, not as an independent principle existing alongside God.
I recognize that much of this remains speculation. I am not
attempting to establish doctrine or claim certainty where mystery remains. I am
simply following the questions wherever they lead and allowing insights from
Christianity, Christian mysticism, Hermetic philosophy, Gnosticism, Taoism, and
contemporary consciousness studies to inform one another.
If my research has taught me anything, it is this: the
problem of evil cannot be answered with slogans. It requires both intellectual
honesty and profound humility. Whatever larger metaphysical framework may
exist, it must never become an excuse for indifference toward suffering. Every
person carrying trauma deserves compassion, justice, and love—not explanations
that diminish their pain.
In the end, I continue to believe that love is more
fundamental than fear, that the Logos is deeper than fragmentation, and that
consciousness itself is moving toward greater awakening. Evil may be terribly
real within our experience, but I no longer believe it has the final word. If
reality is grounded in the Divine, then I trust that even the darkest chapters
of existence belong to a story whose ending is reconciliation, restoration, and
the triumph of love.






