The Problem of Evil
Explanation
The Joke
A philosophy student presents the classic Problem of Evil to God: if God is omnipotent, omniscient, and benevolent, why does evil exist? God's response is not a sophisticated theodicy but something deflating and unsatisfying — essentially admitting He doesn't have a good answer and has been hoping nobody would ask.
The Humor
The Problem of Evil is one of the oldest and most debated questions in philosophy of religion. Centuries of theologians have produced elaborate responses (free will, soul-making, greater good). The comic cuts through all of this by having God simply not have a good excuse. The humor is in the anticlimax — the most important question in theology gets a shrug.
Philosophical Context
The Problem of Evil, formulated in its modern form by Epicurus and elaborated by David Hume and others, remains one of the strongest arguments against classical theism. Common responses include the Free Will Defense (Alvin Plantinga) and soul-making theodicy (John Hick). The comic implies that none of these are convincing even to God Himself.