This essay addresses the question “Where is God?” as a structural rather than rhetorical problem. It argues that the question, as commonly posed, assumes that God should be present as an intervening agent within events. This assumption is examined and rejected. The essay proposes instead that God is not an agent within events but the sustaining ground of the present moment—the condition under which any event, good or evil, becomes actual. By clarifying the ontological status of the present (“the Now”) as the point of actualization, the argument shows that without such a sustaining ground there would be no moment in which intervention, suffering, or freedom could occur. Drawing on insights associated with Augustine of Hippo and Thomas Aquinas, the essay reframes the problem of evil: God does not select or prevent events within the present moment but sustains the condition that makes meaningful action possible. The question of divine absence is thus reinterpreted as a misunderstanding of the kind of presence God would have to be.
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Oscar Gaitan (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69fbe382164b5133a91a2b06 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20044780
Oscar Gaitan
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