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Could Judas have chosen to not betray Jesus?

EdSutton

New Member
npetreley said:
By the way, I can do a hog call,
Sooo-ey!!! Pig!!!
4.gif


Back to the argument!

Ed
 

skypair

Active Member
Larry

Since God knows all things, and his knowledge is both eternal and perfect, people really don't have a choice anyway because they can't change their minds. And so you haven't accomplished anything by avoiding God's sovereign wise purposes in determinism.
Do you not feel "tangled in your own web" on this one??

To foreknow could either mean perfect foreknowledge of OUR choices -- or it could be God's determinism/control of every choice we make, right?

Though the ends are the same, foreknowledge allows free will but your determinism doesn't, correct? I mean, under free will, they could change their minds and God knowingly use their decisions to accomplish His purposes. They opposite cannot be said, can it? That they have free will if God predetermines their actions.

So are both free will and predestination scriptural? Then there has to be a difference in what they mean and how they are applied.

And you can't say free will and foreknowledge disallows sovereignty over the outcomes such that predetermination is the only viable option.

skypair
 

skypair

Active Member
AAA said:
If he did not betray JESUS, then GOD would be a lier, because God said he would betray Jesus...............

:godisgood:
Yeah, but reformbelieve wants to make God the Author of Judas sin. Fits more with his characterizations of God than letting Judas choose to betray Jesus himself.

Or maybe rf still holds Judas responsible for the sin thus turning "God's foreknowledge" into "Calvin's permissive will" so as to get the blood off God's hands.

Just make sure that your construct doesn't give Judas "free will" and he's happy! :D

skypair
 

johnp.

New Member
Just make sure that your construct doesn't give Judas "free will" and he's happy!

It was prophesied how could Judas behave in any other way and God knew it? Is this free will? Have I understood it?

john.
 

Pastor Larry

<b>Moderator</b>
Site Supporter
Do you not feel "tangled in your own web" on this one??
Not at all. In fact, in all my years of discussion, I have never seen a coherent answer to it.

To foreknow could either mean perfect foreknowledge of OUR choices -- or it could be God's determinism/control of every choice we make, right?
Not really, but either way, it doesn't help. When the Greek word is used of God it speaks of an intimate knowledge, a choosing.

Though the ends are the same, foreknowledge allows free will but your determinism doesn't, correct? I mean, under free will, they could change their minds and God knowingly use their decisions to accomplish His purposes. They opposite cannot be said, can it? That they have free will if God predetermines their actions.
Well, loads of problems here. Let me just highlight a few. In your view of foreknowledge, you have not preserved man's free will because they cannot change their minds. If God knows everything eternally, then he knows what they will do. They can do nothing else than what he knows. They are bound by God's prescience.

In my view, they have free will. They can do whatever they want. I thought I have made that clear several times.

So are both free will and predestination scriptural? Then there has to be a difference in what they mean and how they are applied.
They fit together just fine. I have no problems with it.

And you can't say free will and foreknowledge disallows sovereignty over the outcomes such that predetermination is the only viable option.
I think your view doesn't accomplish what you need it to. You can't preserve your idea of free will without being an open theist.
 

Aki

Member
Pastor Larry said:
What is the difference here? Calvinism believes in free choices. Man's choices, like God's, are constrained only by his nature. He is free to do all consistent with his nature; he is free to do all that he wants. Calvinism doesn't believe that Judas was forced to betray Christ, or forced to reject him. Judas did just what he wanted to do, and he is completely responsible for it.
i think Pastor Larry just gave one of the best clues to answer his own topic :D

Pastor Larry said:
So if God knew the outcome, was Judas able to change his mind when he was being taught by Jesus?
this is fallacious approach. first is the assumption that God knew what Judas is going to decide - whatever Judas' final decision would be, God would have certainly known it. Judas changing his mind would only mean that God would have known that as well.

the statement is saying that God knew what Judas would decide, but quietly implies that He is not sure if Judas is going to change is mind after all.

the statement assumed that God know Judas' final decision. so to question if Judas would have changed his mind if God already knew his final decision is simply logically incorrect.

its approach was that the topic assumes God reading the future, and placed a problem that such reading from God is the cause of the future.

Pastor Larry said:
Furthermore, you believe in God who knew that people would reject him and go to hell, and he created them anyway, thus damning them to hell when he could have foreseen their unbelief and lovingly chosen not to create them.

come on now. i am amazed why calvinists say such statement that could be said the same for them. assuming calvinist predestination, God could have not chosen to create humans whom He does not plan to elect in the first place. But He did, knowing that the person does not have the capacity to have faith in Christ.

Pastor Larry said:
Think about it: How loving is it to allow someone to come into existence knowing that they will be eternally damned? If God really loved the world, and knew all things, wouldn't his love cause him to create only those who he knew would be saved?

i wander if this cannot be said to Calvinists as well?
 
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