Hi Vg,
Unfortunately for me this approach runs into major difficulties. Why would such a god create a world where suffering and moral choices aren't necessarily related at all? What about babies and very young children who are not yet capable of making such choices? What about the suffering of animals? What about the many instances of natural disasters that seemingly cause indiscriminate suffering and/or death? What about those who do not understand loss or hardship yet live their lives in comfort and well being? How has humanity been able to relieve or eradicate some of the natural forms of suffering when such a god could surely have done as well as humanity at the very least?
Hi Enki - yes would agree that the suffering and moral choices are not necessarily linked - I assume you mean that the people who suffer are not necessarily suffering because of a moral choice they have made i.e. bad things happen to innocent people.
So would agree that the belief is that god could have intervened and didn't.
Which leaves people with the options of not believing in the existence of a god, or deciding that if such a god did exist they are not worthy of worship, or believing in such a god and worshipping such a god despite the lack of intervention. I think taking any of those positions would be valid. The third option, which makes the least sense to you is valid if you believe in a higher power and accept a hierarchy. The not knowing why there was no intervention by the higher power is a component of the belief as the unknowable is I think part of the appeal of something that you consider higher than yourself.
Yes, I understand that many people can find comfort in a belief and yes, it may help them to make seemingly moral decisions, and yes, it may help them to withstand and deal with the hardships of life, but I don't see why a person's moral outlook has to be predicated on the bad things in a world which has been created by such a god.
If I have understood you correctly, then agree you don't need a god to be able to arrive at moral beliefs. After all, atheists can see bad things happen to good people, and they can and do help alleviate suffering.
I was trying to say that I think believing in a god who could intervene but doesn't would add a slightly different aspect to moral values - the hierarchy, the unknowable "why" , a final judgement as well as the other ideas that go along with the belief would I think alter a person's perspective. For example, from my understanding of Islamic teachings, Muslims have a concept of a day of judgement after death so may view their suffering here as a way of lessening the punishment for any moral failings on that day of judgement.
As I said above, I think it's perfectly reasonable to not want anything to do with such ideas of hierarchy and judgement. But if a person is ok with this kind of hierarchy and judgement and the idea of a higher power, that's presumably why they are ok with a higher power who could intervene but doesn't and they are ok with not knowing why god doesn't intervene.