In view of the witness of Scripture, therefore, we do not come closer to solving the problem of evil by diminishing God’s active and purposeful involvement in any sphere of life. To remove God's sovereignty from the realm of evil before it occurs forces us to conceive of God either as playing 'catch-up,' by redeeming evil only after we have carried it out (after all, in this view, to intervene sooner would jeopardize our free will), or as standing on the sidelines, sympathetic in our struggles but unable to help. Apart from God's sovereignty, God's love in the midst of suffering is downsized to an emotional response of 'caring.'
Scott Hafemann