God is perfectly holy, completely free from evil, and never tempts anyone to sin (James 1:13; 1 John 1:5; Deuteronomy 32:4). Evil entered the world through human rebellion against God, beginning with Adam and Eve, and it continues through the sinful desires within us (Genesis 3:1–6; Romans 5:12; James 1:14–15).
Though God is fully righteous, He remains sovereign over all events, even those involving evil actions. Joseph recognized this truth when he told his brothers, “You meant evil against me, but God meant it for good” (Genesis 50:20).
The clearest example of this is the crucifixion of Jesus, which happened according to God’s plan yet was carried out by “lawless men” who were responsible for their actions (Acts 2:23). Though we may struggle to understand how God can ordain events involving evil without being its cause, His wisdom and ways are far beyond ours (Isaiah 55:8–9; Romans 9:20–21). Through it all, we are called to trust that our sovereign God works through even the darkest moments to accomplish His good purposes.
In a murder mystery, the author writes all of the characters,
including who gets killed and who kills her. But though the author wrote in the murder, no one blames the author for the murder. Instead,
the character who committed the murder is held accountable.
In this still-imperfect analogy, God is like the author writing the story, while we are the characters living it out. He has ordained everything, but everything we do is what we want to do. God has not forced us to sin against our will, which is why He justly holds us responsible for sin.
And God does not
have to justify Himself, either in the authoring nor in the judging. Job, for
example, demanded that God explain why evil was happening to him. God refused to
because He is God and Job was not (Job 38–41). What we learn is that
part of trusting God is trusting that everything He does is good, regardless of
whether we understand it.
Evil in the world
today demonstrates our depravity. God has promised to judge each based on
what we have done (Romans 2:6). However, He offers His Son in our place (1
Peter 3:18). For all who trust in Jesus, God counts Jesus’ death as sufficient
to pay our punishment. However, that requires taking ownership of our sin and
repenting of it. We cannot blame anyone else—not others, not Satan, and
certainly not God.