Skandelon
<b>Moderator</b>
Been down that road... change my wording to "ability to be willing" and it stands the same.With all due respect, you are missing the connection between 'ability' and 'will'.
Nitpicking the analogy?In the scenario of the dog chained to a pole, you are neglecting the dog's will. He loves his chain, and he loves his pole. He does not seek to be released. That is why the dog's nature, his will, MUST be changed first.
Ok, I'll play.
Instead the dog is drugged by the master with a chemical that causes him to love his pole and his chain...better? Does it change anything regarding the point of responsibility for which I was arguing? No. If he is unable to be willing, then he is unable, period. The means of the inability is inconsequential.
Right, but why presume that truth is unable to set men free or an appeal for reconciliation is unable to call a rebel to respond?Consider the sinfulness of mankind. We are slaves to sin, and rebels against God.
Once approached with a Holy Spirit wrought powerful life-giving appeal for reconciliation he might.Does a rebel desire to be reunited with his King?
That is actually what predestination is all about. Whosoever believes has been predestined to adoption, sanctification and glorification. Once one believes they are given the HS as a guarantee.That is the problem with the arguments for autonomous free will. I also find it very interesting that some people argue for man's free will to respond to God (naturally, without God's saving grace), but they also believe that a person cannot lose their salvation.
We affirm the effectual nature of regeneration, just like you do. We just don't order it as you do. You think we are given life so that we will certainly believe but God teaches, "But these are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name." John 20:31
Without influence? You think the powerful gospel has no influence? Paul thinks differently...he said the gospel is the very power of God unto Salvation.The human will MUST be able to change itself at a moment's notice, without cause, without influence.
Man must be completely autonomous, which means that his actions are NEVER caused by anything.
An actor causes his actions. A chooser causes his choice. You may deny the possibility of this yet to do so denies the possibility of God himself, who is the ultimate proof of an 'uncaused cause,' and only one who would deny the omnipotence of God would deny the possibility that he could create other such autonomous creatures. Mysterious indeed, but impossible with God? Never.
Hardly. Being free hardly suggests omnipotent, omniscient and omnipresent powers.In all honestly this puts man on equal footing with God.
Wrong. I'm only as free as my abilities allow. I could want to flap my arms and fly all day but it aint happening. We are talking only about man's moral freedom to respond to God's genuine appeal. There is NOTHING to suggest such divinely granted freedom puts us on His level. That is like saying if a father chooses to give His two year old daughter the ability to choose to sit down at the dinner table then he must not be as physically strong as she is.That is why the belief in human autonomous free will is completely unbiblical, because it sets man as equally free as God.
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