The article addresses the problem of evil and its possible compatibility with God's nature. Wickedness is logically, evidently, and otherwise problematic as contrary to God and his nature, which is good, omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent, and perfect. Thus, the text focuses on this relation or relationship, how we can combine evil with God's nature and why God does not destroy evil himself. The work thus defines what wickedness is and then shows some primary features of God's essence, and the last part tries to show how both concepts are compatible. The text presents a thesis arguing it is possible to combine God's nature and its attributes with evil. The work delves into various possibilities that explore the area of the logical problem of evil and its solution, which leads to the theoretical coexistence of the two main concepts in this thesis. The text tries to best present how it is possible to combine the concept of evil which we described and explained in detail in the first part. We show whether evil exists or it doesn't, give some arguments that defend one side and the other, and offer a working definition of evil. In the second part, we try to present the nature of God and show the main characteristics of that nature. In the third part, as already mentioned, we try to combine these two concepts and offer some solutions to the logical problem of evil described above.
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