Psalty
Active Member
Jon. I was getting ready to answer @Psalty on the same point. You are right. You always had the ability to freely choose. Please understand that. In Calvinist theology, when done right, they do not say that one cannot freely choose as an absolute inability. What they are saying is that we do not freely will, on our own, to come to Christ, because our own free will doesn't want to.
Can I prove that? Well, I can show you the things none other than John Owen wrote regarding this. He wrote that the central problem for us is our free will. Not that is doesn't exist. Calvinists, even more modern ones including R. C. Sproul, say that our inability is real, but that it is moral, not absolute.
Now the key here is two things. One, when a Calvinist says you couldn't have chosen otherwise, what they are saying is that you couldn't have chosen otherwise and have that choice also have been what you most wanted to do, which again, is the real definition of free will. The reason being that there is only one "what you most wanted to do" for a given decision point. Yes, you could have chosen something else, if you had wanted to - but that could not have been your number one choice at that time. Where you guys are messing up is that you look back and realize that another choice may have been better, and that you could have done that, and you could - but at the time you in truth did not want to do that as your primary and only most desirable thing. What you did is what won out as your own free choice. The fact that you could have made a different choice is really hypothetical because once again - the choice you did in fact make, if it was truly your choice at the time, is the only thing you could have done - and still had that been your choice. To choose differently would have required that you willed differently. When a Calvinist points that out do not claim that he is saying that you were blocked or coerced by God from all other choices. All he is saying is that you have to own the fact that your free choice was yours, and that it depended upon your will.
R.C. Sproul went into this with the example from Alice in Wonderland. And he pointed out that the only time the above is not true is in situations where the choice is of no value, in which case it doesn't matter and does indeed become a matter of whim. Indeed in that case you truly could just as well have chosen either alternative because since it didn't matter anyway, you had no reason to evaluate and determine a choice. To go left is just as good as to go right, as he said.
I think the most obvious challenge is the one staring you in the face:
According to this philosophy, if people turn to God, it is simply because they willed to and chose to.