Moral evil results from a perpetrator, usually a person that engages in vice, either through intention or negligence. Natural evil has only victims, and is generally taken to be the result of natural processes. The "evil" thus identified is evil only from the perspective of those affected and who perceive it as an affliction. Examples include cancer, birth defects, tornadoes, earthquakes, tsunamis, hurricanes, and other phenomena which inflict suffering with apparently no accompanying mitigating good. Such phenomena inflict "evil" on victims with no perpetrator to blame. In the
Bible, God is portrayed as both the ultimate creator and perpetrator, since the "sun, moon and stars, celestial activity, clouds, dew, frost, hail, lightning, rain, snow, thunder, and wind are all subject to God's command." Examples of natural evils ascribed to God follow: :* Floods: God brought "a flood of waters on the earth" (Genesis 6:17). :* Thunder, hail, lightning: God "sent thunder and hail, and fire came down" (Exodus 9:23). :* Earthquake: By the Lord "the earth will be shaken" (Isaiah 13:13). :* Drought and Famine: God will shut off rains, so neither land nor trees yield produce (Leviticus 26:19–20). :* Forest fires: God says, "Say to the southern forest, 'I will kindle a fire in you, and it shall devour every green tree in you and every dry tree (Ezekiel 20:47). However, some theologians emphasise that, whilst God is the ultimate perpetrator, natural evil is, in actuality, directly perpetrated by Satan and his demons. This distinction is echoed by some modern
open theists, e.g.
Gregory A. Boyd, who writes, "Divine goodness does not completely control or in any sense will evil." Aquinas partly explained this in terms of primary and secondary
causality, whereby God is the primary (or transcendent) cause of the world, but not the secondary (or immanent) cause of everything that occurs in it. Such accounts explain the presence of natural evil through the story of the
Fall of man, which affected not only human beings, but nature as well (Genesis 3:16–19). Theologian
David Bentley Hart argues that "natural evil is the result of a world that's fallen into death" and says that "in Christian tradition, you don't just accept 'the world as it is but "you take 'the world as it is' as a broken, shadowy remnant of what it should have been." His concept of the human fall, however, is an
atemporal fall: "Obviously, wherever this departure from the divine happened, or whenever, it didn't happen within terrestrial history," and "this world, as we know it, from the
Big Bang up until today, has been the world of death." Especially since the Reformation the distinction between God's will and God's permission, and between primary and secondary causality, has been disputed, notably by
John Calvin. Among modern inheritors of this tradition, Mark R. Talbot ascribes evil to God: "God's foreordination is the ultimate reason why everything comes about, including the existence of all evil persons and things and the occurrence of any evil acts or events." Such models of God's complete foreordination and direct willing of everything that happens lead to the doctrines of
double predestination and
limited atonement. ==Natural versus moral evil==