Hi Batsushi,
I think we can both agree that chronic pain sucks and that this argument from back pain is somewhat a personal repackaging of the problem of evil as “the problem of suffering”
I do not know whether the back pain you face is self-inflicted or the result of a disease, disorder, but for the argument’s sake I’ll say that you suffer from this pain as an innocent victim, and you very well might.
As you put it,
P1) If God is omni-loving, omniscient (you said “omnipotent” but that is the same as omni-powerful, so I changed it a bit), omni-powerful being, then he would:
a) Not want you to have back pain,
b) Have the knowledge of how to stop your back pain
c) Have the ability to stop your back pain
And your back pain would not exist.
P2) Your back pain exists
C) God is not omni-loving, omniscient, or omnipotent
I certainly trust you in your making of P2, so it seems like P1 is what I have to deal with. The typical response to the evidential argument for the problem of evil is theodicies. These defenses would challenge the first premise, not by denying any of the omni-abilities of God, but by asserting that God wants something more than not wanting you to have back pain. Some theists appeal to a greater good scenario where we suffer so that greater goods (physical and spiritual) may come about. Imagine that your back pain is studied by scientists and they discover a cure for all back pain everywhere, but only because you had to suffer first. Or a scenario where your back, working the way it does, prevents you from being paralyzed from the waist down. However, this kind of body requires the nociceptors present to function (a good thing) and they can go on the fritz (a bad thing) and cause severe back pain when affected by disease/disorder. These would be much greater goods than their alternatives, right?
But the kind of suffering we see in the world, and you see in your back pain, doesn’t seem to match up with this kind of greater good, especially when we don’t see them in our lifetime, so we are back to square one.
So, some theists try to just propose an answer to the logical problem of evil, by asserting that the free will God desire’s his creatures to have permits evil/suffering in the world. This breaks down the contradiction present in the problem of evil, but it doesn’t seem super satisfying does it?
As a Christian theist, I find that the only answer I have to this dissatisfaction we feel that maintains these attributes of God is what I call a cruciform response to the problem of Evil. Essentially, God would be unknowable (and potentially not omni-benevolent) if he possesses all of these attributes and evil still exists, unless,
he too suffers. However, this is not the place for discussions of theological matters, but philosophical ones. So I’ll stop there.