Maybe I've heard free will too many times here lately, but that word is losing any type of meaning to me.
Great! If that's the case, just come toward the light.
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Maybe I've heard free will too many times here lately, but that word is losing any type of meaning to me.
Once again, please explain why millions of unregenerate people baptize their infants, attend church, pray, take communion, etc. if they do not desire to please God. I'm not saying they are pleasing God, I am saying they desire to please God. Why aren't these people desiring to please God?
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God is true to who he is.
His essential or characteristic attributes are inherent; he cannot be “not God”.
A question that defies logic like the one above, or the question in the OP is illogical.
Rob
Yea, some of these responses do not make sense. Let's say i do not want to do something. Just because i do not want to do it does not mean i do not have free will. It's when i want to do something but cannot do it--that is what determines i do not have free will, right?
Hebrews 11:6A man in a prison cell can read, do pushups, sit, stand, walk in circles, talk, remain silent. . . He is "free" and able to do countless things, except leave his prison cell.
Our "free will" is limited by who and what we are. Unregenerate men can't please God, nor do they desire to. It's outside of the ability of their nature, like a fish flying.
Millions of men worship idols and practice a pagan version of Christianity. They seek not God, but things. They please not God, because their worship is actually worship of self.
A man in a prison cell can read, do pushups, sit, stand, walk in circles, talk, remain silent. . . He is "free" and able to do countless things, except leave his prison cell.
Our "free will" is limited by who and what we are. Unregenerate men can't please God, nor do they desire to. It's outside of the ability of their nature, like a fish flying.
Millions of men worship idols and practice a pagan version of Christianity. They seek not God, but things. They please not God, because their worship is actually worship of self.
Although a key attribute of God is His omnipresence, it would appear that He has chosen to act outside of the boundaries of His nature and remove His presence from those who are cast into Hell.
Matthew 25:41 Then shall he say also unto them on the left hand, Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his angels:
II Thessalonians 1:9 Who shall be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord, and from the glory of his power;
Although a key attribute of God is His omniscience, He (God the Son) appears to have acted outside of His nature and limited His knowledge on at least one occasion.
Mark 13:32 But of that day and that hour knoweth no man, no, not the angels which are in heaven, neither the Son, but the Father.
So, it appears that God can do whatever He pleases, even if it is acting outside of what we perceive to be His nature.
Now, let the arguments from authority begin!
I have no problem with you believing that; however, I’m going to need more than just your statements. Please support your statements with Scripture.That language is relational, not proximal.
Hell is the unmitigated presence of God.
I have no problem with you believing that; however, I’m going to need more than just your statements. Please support your statements with Scripture.
I agree as well. I never said otherwise.Is God omnipresent? The Church has believed He is for 2,000 years, and I agree.
Surely you see the obvious weakness of using this verse to refute the scripture I quoted above."If I ascend to heaven, you are there! If I make my bed in Sheol, you are there!" (Psalm 139:8)
I agree as well. I never said otherwise.
Surely you see the obvious weakness of using this verse to refute the scripture I quoted above.
What are your thoughts on the omniscience statement and scripture given?
Yes.Does God have free will?
I have no problem with you believing that; however, I’m going to need more than just your statements. Please support your statements with Scripture.
Yes.
That is, any responsible and accurate definition of Free Will, certainly.
As in God was free either to create or not create.
God was free to make man and love him, or not to.
He was free to make angels a party to grace if he so chose etc...
Could he sin?
Of course not. But then again, inasmuch as sin is that which is contrary to God's will, that's logically impossible by definition.
Does God possess whatever perverted straw-man definition of Free-will that some might be tempted to dream up?
No.
Does he have responsibly and correctly defined free will?
Of course.
So what's that? being able to do what that person *wants* to do?I've used the definition of free will widely held by non-Calvinists, and my assertion is neither God nor man has Libertarian Free Will.
So what's that? being able to do what that person *wants* to do?
***Important clarification. Classical Arminians don't believe that men come to Christ unaided. They believe in "prevenient grace"; however, the average Evangelical does not speak of, or credit "prevenient grace". Most people are functional Pelagians.
Why does free will include doing what you do not want to do? That's called doing something *against your will*More like, wanting to do what you don't want to do.
In the context of soteriology, some hold, "the position that the unbeliever’s free will is sufficiently self-contained, self-sufficient, and self-caused (without external coercion) so as to be able to accept or reject Christ as Savior, on his own, apart from God's enabling. It assumes that the sinful will is somehow capable, by virtue of being "free", to be able to choose to believe in God and follow him through Christ." The Error of Libertarian Free Will
This is a big deal, because if someone correctly understands "free will", he finds himself in agreement with "Calvinism".
***Important clarification. Classical Arminians don't believe that men come to Christ unaided. They believe in "prevenient grace"; however, the average Evangelical does not speak of, or credit "prevenient grace". Most people are functional Pelagians.