God's Goodness
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About this listen
Is God good because He follows moral rules—or is He goodness itself? All Christians confess that God is good. But what does that actually mean?
In this episode, Anthony Alberino challenges the modern assumption that divine goodness is simply maximal moral perfection and show why that view leads straight into a classic philosophical dilemma. Drawing from Aristotle, Aquinas, and the classical Christian tradition, this episode argues that God’s goodness is not a moral property He possesses, but something far deeper: God is Goodness Itself.
We explore:
- Why the modern “moral perfection” view of God collapses into an Euthyphro-style dilemma
- The classical metaphysical account of goodness as teleological, perfective, and convertible with being
- Why goodness is not primarily moral, but ontological
- How perfection, actuality, and existence ground all goodness
- Why evil is not a thing, but a privation of due good
- How moral goodness depends on a deeper metaphysical structure
- Why God must be infinitely good—not by character, but by nature
- How God, as Goodness Itself, is the Final Cause and ultimate end of all desire
This episode shows why, on the classical view, God cannot fail to be good—not because He conforms to a moral standard, but because being itself is good, and God is Being Itself. If you’ve ever wondered how classical theology understands goodness, perfection, evil, desire, and God’s ultimacy, this episode lays the metaphysical groundwork.
- Key topics & thinkers: Divine Goodness • God and Morality • Euthyphro Dilemma • Aristotle • Aquinas • Classical Theism • Metaphysics of Goodness • Act and Potency • Being and Goodness • Evil as Privation • Teleology • Final Cause • God as the Good