theodicy-5
Explanation
This comic tackles the problem of theodicy -- the theological question of why an all-powerful, all-good God permits evil and suffering. A person in bed is praying to God, acknowledging that God is omnipotent and all-good, and asking why there is suffering. God appears and responds that yes, there are tsunamis, plagues, and famines, but maybe God has fixed the really bad stuff and what remains is relatively mild. The person points out: "Technically YOU made the tornado that destroyed your sister's house." God, rather than engaging with the philosophical point, pivots to petty retaliation: "This doesn't warrant a giant cloud of locusts, but I AM gonna cut off business to your favorite dim sum place."
The humor operates on multiple levels. First, it parodies the common theological defense that observed evil might actually be the best possible outcome -- God implies things could be much worse, which is a version of the "best of all possible worlds" argument (associated with Leibniz). Second, the comic undercuts the grandeur of theological debate by making God petty and vindictive in a hilariously mundane way -- rather than sending plagues, God closes a dim sum restaurant. This deflation from cosmic theology to restaurant closures is the core comedic mechanism.
The comic also plays with the inherent logical tension in theodicy: if God is truly all-powerful and all-good, then any suffering at all requires justification, and the "it could be worse" defense doesn't actually resolve the logical problem. SMBC frequently returns to theodicy as a topic, and the "-5" in the slug suggests this is the fifth installment in a series exploring variations on this theme.