Evil is not God's will.
If god exists and is omnipotent and omniscient, then evil obviously
is its will, otherwise it wouldn't exist.
It is an inevitable consequence of the freedom of will given to beings which God brought into existence.
Firstly, that doesn't mean it's not god's will, it just means that your god thought evil was a price worth paying for having beings with "freedom".
Secondly, we are still waiting for the first hint of a rational reason to take your self-contradictory notion of freedom or your god at all seriously.
Without such freedom we would all be meaningless puppets of nature (which many on this thread apparently believe we are!).
Daft assertion and an
appeal to consequences fallacy.
Why don't you care that you rely on logical fallacies?None of us can claim to be perfect in God's eyes - we are all sinners.
Which totally contradicts the idea of freedom. If
everybody fails a test, that can't be a free choice. That isn't freedom, it's a design flaw.
In sacrificing Himself He is taking upon Himself all the sins of the world in order to reconcile anyone who accepts Him as their Lord and Saviour.
Without such sacrifice, there would be no recognition of the importance of reconciliation, and evil would reign supreme.
It's incredible that this is so embedded it Christian culture that people don't see how utterly bizarre and unjust it is. We're supposed to believe that this god's weird sadomasochistic act of becoming human and arranging to be tortured to death, somehow means that we can be forgiven for being the way god made us in the first place, but then only if we believe this ludicrous nonsense.
And BTW, even if we ignore all this nonsense and accept for a moment that evil is the "inevitable consequence of the freedom", then what's going to happen in heaven? Are people no longer going to be free, or will there be evil there too?