• Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.

    Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!

Do We Have Free Will 2

AustinC

Well-Known Member
Did you loose the ability to make a choice between good and evil? Free will does not save. Why do people keep claiming free will saves? My free will claims every single soul in the United states all change their minds and trust fully on the Grace of God? Why stop there. My free will claims every single soul in the world just now turned to Jesus Christ. If it were that simple, then all just got saved in Christ. My free will did not even change me. It only let me change when God asked if I was willing. I said, Yes. God saved me by His Atonement. My sinful will and nature did not want God. The ability to freely choose is free will. It was not stopped by my sinful will, nor the Will of God. In fact God encourages us with the sealing of the Holy Spirit in every person.
You would not have been saved had you not exercised your free will to choose God.

Is that correct?

If so, by exercising your free will to reject God, after you initially chose God, can you remove yourself from being saved?
 

timtofly

Well-Known Member
You would not have been saved had you not exercised your free will to choose God.

Is that correct?

If so, by exercising your free will to reject God, after you initially chose God, can you remove yourself from being saved?
A double minded man could go back and forth their whole life. They may not know their own heart. God only knows the outcome. Do you know very many who can never make up their mind?
 

AustinC

Well-Known Member
A double minded man could go back and forth their whole life. They may not know their own heart. God only knows the outcome. Do you know very many who can never make up their mind?
I take this to mean you agree that a Christian can lose his salvation in the same fashion that he gained his salvation...by virtue of free will.
 

37818

Well-Known Member
Nope it’s worse than that. We are born dead spiritually. The human spirit is like a corpse in the body. It can however respond to Satan and to the world, but it is dead to God and cannot respond to God in the form of seeking and loving God.
So God's word is dead, . . . John 6:68, Romans 10:17, Hebrews 4:12.
 

Sai

Well-Known Member

atpollard

Well-Known Member
How does someone, of their own free will, simply choose to change their mind about what they fundamentally believe to be true?
How does someone wake up one morning and suddenly change his mind and believe that the Sky is Green and the Grass is Blue?

Certainly that is easier than one day believing that YOU are master of your destiny and death is "nothingness" and 'god' is an invisible unicorn that makes the simple minded feel good ... and the next day CHOOSING (theoretically of your own free will) to suddenly believe that God is real, those that reject God are the fools, there is a life after death, and Jesus Christ is your Lord and Savior?

How is this "free will choice" to turn everything you believe upside down really supposed to work?
 

Sai

Well-Known Member
How does someone, of their own free will, simply choose to change their mind about what they fundamentally believe to be true?
How does someone wake up one morning and suddenly change his mind and believe that the Sky is Green and the Grass is Blue?

Certainly that is easier than one day believing that YOU are master of your destiny and death is "nothingness" and 'god' is an invisible unicorn that makes the simple minded feel good ... and the next day CHOOSING (theoretically of your own free will) to suddenly believe that God is real, those that reject God are the fools, there is a life after death, and Jesus Christ is your Lord and Savior?

How is this "free will choice" to turn everything you believe upside down really supposed to work?

Old age
 

atpollard

Well-Known Member
Did Adam hide because of free will?
Yes. Every human chooses to hide from God, every time. It is what our free natural fallen will wants to do. “Everyone who does evil hates the light, and will not come into the light for fear that their deeds will be exposed.” That is why “it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God” and why God must “remove from you your heart of stone and give you a heart of flesh” and why “No one can come to [Jesus] unless the Father who sent [Him] draws them”.
 

Sai

Well-Known Member
Yes. Every human chooses to hide from God, every time. It is what our free natural fallen will wants to do. “Everyone who does evil hates the light, and will not come into the light for fear that their deeds will be exposed.” That is why “it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God” and why God must “remove from you your heart of stone and give you a heart of flesh” and why “No one can come to [Jesus] unless the Father who sent [Him] draws them”.

So he had a will that was limited by his sin nature and before the fall he was in a stare of unconfirmed holiness with the ability to make an unholy choice. Sounds like the idea of a free will is disproven by Adam who knew God face to face and had no reason to hide from God did so because he had died spiritually. However, once God went to him and not visa-versa he was regenerated immediately even tho God did not ask him to repent.
 

atpollard

Well-Known Member
However, once God went to him and not visa-versa he was regenerated immediately even tho God did not ask him to repent.
I don’t really see that in the man whose first words to God were to throw Eve under the bus for what Adam had done, and then to blame God for giving him Eve in the first place. After this, he goes on to raise two sons where one immediately kills the other. There may have been room for a little more “regeneration” in Adam. ;)
 

Sai

Well-Known Member
I don’t really see that in the man whose first words to God were to throw Eve under the bus for what Adam had done, and then to blame God for giving him Eve in the first place. After this, he goes on to raise two sons where one immediately kills the other. There may have been room for a little more “regeneration” in Adam. ;)

Regeneration means being born again. Eve was thrown under the bus post fall pre regenerated. We are not responsible for the elect vs non elect, our job is to treat all as able to receive Christ, Cain was not Able.
 

atpollard

Well-Known Member
We are not responsible for the elect vs non elect, our job is to treat all as able to receive Christ, Cain was not Able.
Sorry, but I am just not following you here.
I was only speaking of Adam and the events recorded in Genesis about him.
Technically, God gave Adam several chances to repent.
”Where were you?” was not a question that God did not know the answer to. “Who told you that you were naked?” and “Did you eat from the Tree?” were both questions that God already knew the answer to (omniscient), so they were all really invitations for Adam to confess and repent.
 

Sai

Well-Known Member
Sorry, but I am just not following you here.
I was only speaking of Adam and the events recorded in Genesis about him.
Technically, God gave Adam several chances to repent.
”Where were you?” was not a question that God did not know the answer to. “Who told you that you were naked?” and “Did you eat from the Tree?” were both questions that God already knew the answer to (omniscient), so they were all really invitations for Adam to confess and repent.

The question was did Adam have free will. He did not. He could not go to God because of total depravity, God went to Adam, God sacrificed the animals and clothed Adam. The questioning displayed Adam’s fallen state of mind, one that could not repent. It was the belief of God’s covenant made with Adam after the fall that caused Adam’s regeneration. Adam and Eve believed the promos of the seed of the woman and that was their required content of faith for salvation. No asking Adam to repent, merely declaring the results of Adam’s sin and the provisions were to be accepted or rejected by both Adam and Eve. We know that they believed by Eve’s declarations the birth of Cain when the text reads; I have gotten the God Man. Eve’s theology was correct but her application to Cain was incorrect obviously.
 

atpollard

Well-Known Member
The question was did Adam have free will. He did not. He could not go to God because of total depravity, God went to Adam, God sacrificed the animals and clothed Adam. The questioning displayed Adam’s fallen state of mind, one that could not repent. It was the belief of God’s covenant made with Adam after the fall that caused Adam’s regeneration. Adam and Eve believed the promos of the seed of the woman and that was their required content of faith for salvation. No asking Adam to repent, merely declaring the results of Adam’s sin and the provisions were to be accepted or rejected by both Adam and Eve. We know that they believed by Eve’s declarations the birth of Cain when the text reads; I have gotten the God Man. Eve’s theology was correct but her application to Cain was incorrect obviously.
Thank you for the clarification.
I agree with everything you wrote with the possible exception of the implication that Adam was saved without repentance. That feels like an argument from silence.
 

Sai

Well-Known Member
Thank you for the clarification.
I agree with everything you wrote with the possible exception of the implication that Adam was saved without repentance. That feels like an argument from silence.

Repentance is always when used in the context of the gospel is a synonym for faith.
 
Top