Abstract
For many believers, encounters with evil trigger a deep desire to understand the divine reasons for
permitting evil, that is, a desire for theodicy. Very often, however, attempts to find a theodicy fail—a phenomenon
called the inscrutability of evil. Skeptical theists attribute this failure to our cognitive limitations as creatures. In this
paper, I argue that the clash between the common desire for theodicy and the inscrutability of evil should be analyzed
using the concept of absurdity, famously explored by Albert Camus and some contemporary philosophers
studying the meaning of life. I then propose that a loving God would not subject human beings to the experience of
absurdity, so He would not create a world in which our cognitive limitations prevent us from finding a theodicy.
This conclusion has important implications for the plausibility of the skeptical theist’s position.