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The Pope and Juan Carlos: Is everything directly willed and caused by God?

Occasionalism is the flawed belief that God ultimately causes everything—that even when it appears another thing is a cause, really that event is only the “occasion” in which God causes the event to happen.

(Image: Christopher Sardegna, chrissardegna.com | Unsplash.com)

Pope Francis recently met with Chilean victims of sexual abuse by priests as part of his efforts to help heal the deep wounds in that country. But the headlines about this event were dominated, not by the Holy Father’s gesture of outreach, but by a reported remark from the pope to one of the victims, a gay man.

According to Juan Carlos Cruz, Pope Francis said to him, “‘Juan Carlos, that you are gay does not matter. God made you like that and he loves you like that and I do not care. The Pope loves you as you are, you have to be happy with who you are.’”

Some secular news outlets have reported this story and suggested it signals a “new openness” of Pope Francis and the Church toward same-sex attraction. The Vatican has declined to comment as it does with regard to stories about alleged private remarks made by the pope.

Whether these were the pope’s exact words or whether there was some misunderstanding or miscommunication cannot be known; certainly, on its face, it would require some clarification, and would contradict other statements Pope Francis has made on same-sex attraction (for example, his recently reported remarks to the Italian bishops that men with homosexual tendencies should not be admitted to seminary or ordained).

But the quotation, and the way in which it has been interpreted by many, does bring to the fore an idea that is both widely held and deeply flawed: that God causes everything.

People often speak as though God makes every individual thing happen. You missed an appointment because of an accident on the highway? God must have been saving you from some catastrophe that would have occurred otherwise. A horrible tragedy has occurred in your life? God works in mysterious ways, but He’s brought it about for some good. In this way of thinking, every event from the direction the wind blows to the outcome of wars is directly willed and caused by God.

This is an error.

As with all theological errors, this idea contains some element of truth, but that element either gets twisted or blown out of proportion. There are several truths underneath this notion: that God is the creator and thus the cause of all things; that Divine Providence guides all things in a mysterious way toward God’s ultimate will; that “all things work together for good for those who love the Lord” (Rom 8:28). But when these truths are isolated from each other or from other truths, they lead to a false impression: that God both directly wills and causes every event and every detail of life. It leads one to think that God wanted this person to die of a drug overdose or that person to be paralyzed in a random accident. It makes people believe that God willed this person to be blind, or that person to have same-sex attraction.

This is actually a very old theological error, one that has arisen in several forms and taken different names, but remained essentially the same. Perhaps the most useful name for our purposes would be “occasionalism.” This is the belief that God ultimately causes everything—that even when it appears another thing is a cause, really that event is only the “occasion” in which God causes the event to happen.

For example, in a game of billiards, we see one billiard ball strike another, and the other ball set in motion. When we observe this series of events we infer that the cause of the movement of the billiard ball was the impact of the first ball. But the occasionalist would say that this could not be so, for how could any created, contingent, finite being be the cause of a change to any other thing like itself? Surely, just as God is the only one with the power to cause things to be, He is the only one with the power to cause things to happen. Otherwise, if created things could make things happen of their own accord, they would be in competition with God, would they not? Thus, only God can cause things to happen, and the appearance of created things causing events is the mere “occasion” for God’s action.

Occasionalism was a particularly influential school of thought among the medieval Islamic philosophers, especially al-Ghazali, and we can see why. The Islamic conception of God (Allah) is of a being radically beyond all things and supreme over them. Allah is beyond truth, such that He is free to contradict Himself. And Allah’s power is beyond all things. If Allah is truly omnipotent, Allah must be the cause of all things—for how could anything else act as a cause if it is inferior to Allah, receiving its very being from Allah?

This idea found its way via Arabic commentaries on Aristotle into medieval Christian thinking, and the thread of occasionalist thinking can be followed from Nicholas of Autrecourt to the Cartesians right through to David Hume and his famous denial of our ability to know causality. In each these cases, in various ways, thinkers deny or at least question the ability of contingent creations of God to be able to make anything happen in the world by themselves.

The influence of this occasionalist strain of thought has persisted through time and filtered down into the common expression discussed above. Thus, people are led to think that God wills hurricanes to destroy homes and lives and that He intentionally makes people to live with certain temptations.

But this could not be so, and it’s important to keep other truths in mind to help us remember. For if God positively willed someone to have a proclivity toward a certain kind of sin—if He had “made them that way”—then it would be the case that God had intentionally created a person as wanting to commit an act against His will. But this is nonsense. How can God will for someone to want to act against His will?

In order to prevent these notions from taking hold, there are several key ideas we must understand.

First is a proper conception of the relationship between God and creation. As with so many things, we tend toward error on one side or another of the truth. One error is to think that there is no real distinction between God and creatures, that “we’re all part of Him.” This is pantheism, and this is false. The other error is to think of God as differing from us only by degree and not by kind—that is, thinking of God as the biggest being out of all the beings, the one that would take up the most space in a pie chart. But this is equally false (and, as you can see, a similar kind of error—both leave out a crucial distinction between God and creation). In reality, God does not exist in the same way that creatures exist. God is Existence Itself, the one who exists necessarily, whose essence it is to exist. (This was the philosophical interpretation that St. Thomas Aquinas gave us God’s revelation of His name to Moses: “I am who am.”) Creatures, on the other hand, exist only contingently, dependently—we exist because we are granted existence by God. For creatures, existence is a gift granted us by the Creator.

Similarly, God does not cause events in the same way that creatures do. God is the primary cause of all things, because all things receive existence from Him. But along with that gift of existence, God also grants creatures the capacity to act as causes in the material world in a limited way. This is what we call “secondary causality.” God is the primary cause of all things as the origin of their existence, but created things, from billiards balls to your uncle Bill, are secondary causes, truly able to make things happen.

It is because God does not exist in the same way that we exist (necessarily, not contingently) and does not cause in the same way we cause (primarily, not secondarily) that we are not “in competition” with God, as the occasionalists suppose. When I cause the keys on this keyboard to be pressed down and form words on the screen, I am not opposing God in doing so; rather, God has given me the agency to choose to do these things and make them happen. It is part of God’s will that His creatures be able to make things happen of their own accord.

But how could creatures act independently if all happens according to God’s will? Does that not determine their actions? To understand this, we must draw a distinction between God’s permissive will and God’s active will. It is true that nothing happens against the will of God, but it is also true that not everything is willed by God directly; some things are merely allowed for some greater end or purpose. In the case of evils committed by human beings, we can say that the capacity to commit evil acts is a necessary corollary of our capacity to choose to know, love, and serve God. God gifts human beings with free choice, the ability to cooperate with His grace or to reject it—God loves us, but He does not force Himself upon us. So, God permits moral evils as the necessary consequence of the freedom required for the potential to live in a loving relationship with Him.

But in the case of natural evils, of privations of the good not freely chosen, the end or purpose is more mysterious. It is not readily evident in each individual case of a life ended prematurely or a tragic accident why this event was allowed to occur. We can say generally that when humanity fell from grace it took creation along with it, so that both man and the cosmos are in the midst of being renewed in Christ, and that the suffering caused by the dangers of the world plays a part in that renewal. But beyond that, it is difficult to say much more.

We have traveled a long way in trying to answer this question, but this background information is necessary to address the question properly. So: God is the creator of all things, and is the primary cause of all things, creating them good. But everything, even inanimate objects, has its own ability to be a cause, even to make things to be in a way other than God would positively intend them to be, so that genetic abnormalities can cause cancers or brain chemistry abnormalities can cause mental disorders. Likewise, whatever is the cause of sexual orientation, there is no need to posit that “God created that person that way,” as if we were occasionalists, and indeed, doing so would bring about several contradictions, most notably that God would be willing that a person want to violate His will.

It is doubtful that the pope used this phrase, but it is one heard often enough from others. This short saying contains within it a host of theological and philosophical errors. Sometimes it’s the pithiest of phrases that is most dangerous.


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About Nicholas Senz 30 Articles
Nicholas Senz is Pastoral Associate at Holy Spirit Catholic Church in Fishers, IN. He holds Master's degrees in philosophy and theology from the Dominican School of Philosophy and Theology in Berkeley, CA. Nicholas lives with his wife and three children.

10 Comments

  1. … genetic abnormalities can cause cancers or brain chemistry abnormalities can cause mental disorders. Likewise, whatever is the cause of sexual orientation, there is no need to posit that “God created that person that way” …
    – Nicholas Senz

    Moses said: I beseech thee, Lord. I am not eloquent from yesterday and the day before: and since thou hast spoken to thy servant, I have more impediment and slowness of tongue. The Lord said to him: Who made man’s mouth? or who made the dumb and the deaf, the seeing and the blind? did not I?
    – Exodus 4:10-11

    And Jesus passing by, saw a man, who was blind from his birth: And his disciples asked him: Rabbi, who hath sinned, this man, or his parents, that he should be born blind? Jesus answered: Neither hath this man sinned, nor his parents; but that the works of God should be made manifest in him.
    – John 9:1-3

    The Scriptures seem to indicate that it is quite correct to think “God created that person that way” when someone is born with an affliction or disorder.

    God works in mysterious ways, but He’s brought it about for some good. In this way of thinking, every event from the direction the wind blows to the outcome of wars is directly willed and caused by God. This is an error.
    – Nicholas Senz

    And speaking he said: Blessed be the name of the Lord from eternity and for evermore: for wisdom and fortitude are his. And he changeth times and ages: taketh away kingdoms and establisheth them
    – Daniel 2:20-21

    He multiplieth nations, and destroyeth them, and restoreth them again after they were overthrown.
    – Job 12:23

    It seems that God does indeed make nations rise and fall according to His perfect Providence, which would include the outcome of wars, and includes everything else for that matter:

    The witness of Scripture is unanimous that the solicitude of divine providence is concrete and immediate; God cares for all, from the least things to the great events of the world and its history. The sacred books powerfully affirm God’s absolute sovereignty over the course of events …
    – Catechism of the Catholic Church, #303

    And so we see the Holy Spirit, the principal author of Sacred Scripture, often attributing actions to God without mentioning any secondary causes. This is not a “primitive mode of speech,” but a profound way of recalling God’s primacy and absolute Lordship over history and the world …
    – Catechism of the Catholic Church, #304

    God is omniscient. When “In the beginning God created heaven, and earth,” He knew every single thing that was going to happen, “from the least things,” including the activity of every last subatomic particle, to the “great events of the world and its history.” God has “absolute sovereignty over the course of events.” If one knows in advance all of the results of an action or a project one has freely chosen to launch, one is responsible for what happens. With God though, His Providence also takes into account the decisions and actions of those beings He endowed with an intellect and a genuinely free will. All He wills and all He permits is derived from His infinite goodness. We aren’t always able to see that, just as a child wails and moans about things his loving parents subject him to for his own good because he doesn’t see why he has to eat his vegetables or go to bed.

    • Blindness is not a morally disordered inclination nor does it tempt one to commit an abonimable sin. There has been no prof of homosexuals being born homosexual but if there it still wouldn’t prove that they were made that way: our person gives us our body and fallen nature, God infuses it with a soul.

      • Our fourth child, one of eleven altogether, died in few weeks of severe complications from Cystic Fibrosis, one of which was “ambiguous genitalia.” A chromosome test was done to determine if we had a little boy or a little girl. That’s how we found out we had a son. The doctors nor my wife and I could determine our child’s gender by just looking at him.

        We had two other children with Cystic Fibrosis after little David died. One of them died of complications from CF at the age of 24, the other is doing miraculously well.

        I bring all this up just to make the point the gender development can go wrong before a child is born. I have no idea what David’s sexual orientation would have been, but had it been homosexual (according to his chromosomes, anyway) I would have taught him that he must live in a chaste manner like everybody else. I would have resented it very much if people assumed he was evil because of his sexual inclinations.

        Whether one’s sexual orientation is homosexual or heterosexual, one must live in a chaste manner; there is no sin in having an inclination, the sin is in fornication, whether it be homosexual or heterosexual. As the Catechism of the Catholic Church puts it (#2358):

        [Homosexuals] are called to fulfill God’s will in their lives and, if they are Christians, to unite to the sacrifice of the Lord’s Cross the difficulties they may encounter from their condition.

        Yes, many people choose homosexuality who were not born with that disorder, and choose also to engage in homosexual fornication. There is no excuse for that.

        I am just pointing out there must be some people whose disordered sexual orientation is something they were born with. That doesn’t make them evil. It makes them people with a heavy cross to carry.

        • I think it has been pointed out before that those who carry this particular heavy cross, and do the Lord’s will in the other aspects of their lives, will be among the greatest of the saints.

        • I am very sorry for your loss but, unfortunately, you are falling for the “born that way” cause.

          #2358 also says that homosexuality is “objectively disordered”. God would not create a person that way, as that would contradict Genesis. There are causes of this disorder that are, according to various psychiatric literature you can find online, deep-seated and found in the family dynamic, and acting out the homosexual urges are an attempt to cope.

          I am also very sorry about the trials you have had with your children’s health. But keep in mind that a person does not choose to be homosexual and that instead of patronizing that inclination by either urging them to be chaste or to exercise it, we should, as parents and in all humility, find family treatment for this disorder, as we would for any other one.

          • It is apparent that gender development can become disordered while one is developing in the womb. That must be kept in mind. Certainly the fact that an inclination is not in itself sinful must be kept in mind. The heterosexual inclination is not in itself sinful. Fornication is. The same is true of the disordered homosexual inclination.

  2. God made you that way? Or, predispositions? Or predispositions acted upon? Why not hear from a writer celebrated by the homosexual community itself? In his works the novelist Andre Gide projected his struggles in a bisexual double life up. What does he actually say? Gide was actually opposed to sexual license and favored self-control and “sublimating sexual energy into desirable moral and artistic qualities.” Nevertheless, his biographer concludes that Gide,

    “emphatically protests that he has not a word to say against marriage and reproduction (but then) suggests that it would be of benefit to an adolescent, before his desires are fixed, to have a love affair with an older man, instead of with a woman. . . the general principle admitted by Gide, elsewhere in his treatise, that sexual practice tends to stabilize in the direction where it has first found satisfaction; to inoculate a youth with homosexual tastes seems an odd way to prepare him for matrimony” (Harold March, Gide and the Hound of Heaven, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1952).

    God or nature; Nature or nurture? How often is it early tipping points, or worse (abuse), that “stabilize” mere tendencies into a more fixed orientation? Is Gide’s admittedly anecdotal history one window on how we might understand our culture of adolescent experimentation and then the re-stabilization/ redefinition marriage itself?

  3. Excellent commentary, and one that I have longed to read, after hearing many Catholics tell me that “God is in control”, as though we are just actors on the stage.

    One concern, though, is that God allows a misfortune or evil to occur so that a greater good might come of it. I am not sure the consequentialism is part of God’s Will. This, also, is another meme I hear from Catholics who cannot make sense of evil. However, I cannot make sense of a God who would seem to do that.

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