Today's advice 3 September 2020 taken from the Catechism of the Catholic Church

"Lord, get away from me who am a sinner"
Angels and men, intelligent and free creatures, must walk towards their ultimate destiny for free choice and love of preference. They can, therefore, deviate. In fact, they have sinned. This is how moral evil, immeasurably more serious than physical evil, entered the world. God is in no way, directly or indirectly, the cause of moral evil. However, respecting the freedom of his creature, he allows it and, mysteriously, he knows how to draw good from it: "Indeed, God almighty (...), being supremely good, would never allow any evil to exist in his works, if it were not sufficiently powerful and good to draw good from evil itself "(St. Augustine).

Thus, over time, it may be discovered that God, in his omnipotent providence, can draw good from the consequences of an evil, even moral, caused by his creatures: "It was not you who sent me here, but God. (...) you thought of evil against me, God thought of making it serve a good (...) to make a large people live "(Gen 45,8; 50,20).

From the greatest moral evil that has ever been committed, the rejection and killing of the Son of God, caused by the sin of all men, God, with the superabundance of his grace, (Rom 5:20) has drawn the greatest goods: the glorification of Christ and our redemption. With this, however, evil does not become good.