The email came yesterday evening. The guy was from Baltimore.
“Dear Sean, you’re a [expletive] idiot. I have been so put off by your ‘spiritual’ commentary. I am an atheist, I do not believe in God…”
So I went and got another beer before continuing.
“…Your God is [another expletive] dork. God cannot be good and all-powerful at the same time. Because if he were, there would be no disease, tornadoes, starvation, mass shootings, genocides, murders, or suffering.
“He cannot be omnipotent and concomitantly allow evil, you can’t have it both ways… There was recently a mass hooting in Kentucky, where was your God then?
“...Sorry Sean, I’d like to believe in a Higher Power, but my heart and brain both say ‘Hell no.’”
Dear Friend,
I’m no theologian. I’m not even much of a church guy, either. Religious? No. Not unless it’s a pennant race. I’m more of a Pabst Blue Ribbon enthusiast.
Moreover, you’ve written to an uneducated man. I had to look up the word “concomitantly.” I’m still not sure how to use this word.
Namely, because I’m not
a smart man. My grade school teachers called me “slow.” Other adults called me “challenged.” But as it happens, I’m neither slow nor challenged, I just have slydexia.
So I am not exactly the guy you should be approaching with this kind of high-minded email. I can already tell you’re much sharper than I am. Any response I make will make me look like a complete expletive.
There is, however, one thing I do know.
I once met a woman from Illinois who was born blind and deaf. Just like Helen Keller.
I’d like to tell you about her. She was remarkable. You would have liked her.
The percentage of deaf-blind cases in America is low. You’re looking at a population of about 11,000 in the U.S.
Moreover, 90 percent of deaf-blind people also have medical, physical, or…