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The immediate cause of my sins is my own sinful nature. However, God must be willing to permit my sins or else he would transfer me to a glorified state. In that sense, it is God's will for me to sin.
That is a true saying. Think about the implications of that statement and see if the rest of your theology matches up to it.The pastor of the church I attended sunday said, "You are not a sinner because you sin...You sin because you are a sinner."
Immediate cause and first cause are not the same. God is "first cause" of all things - in a decretive sense - which ESTABLISHES second causes rather than ruling them out.I understand and I agree that God must permit even sinful choices, but what I'm looking for is the origin of that sinful intent. As one who believes in contra-casual free will I have no problem giving man the ability of first cause choice, thus making him the first cause of his evil intent, but Calvinists don't typically allow for this, because it would have a choice of man informing God. Thus, I'm attempting to get to the origin of the evil intent in the Calvinistic system: Is is of God or man?
If man, as the vote count indicates, then how does that not violate the Calvinistic concept of complete sovereignty and rejection of contra-causal free will?
If God, why doesn't the vote indicate as much? And how does one holding this view defend against the accusation of God being the author of sin/evil?
I understand that, so you are saying in fact that God is the originator (first cause) of man's sinful intent?Immediate cause and first cause are not the same.
What do you mean by a "decretive" sense? Do you mean God permissively decreed the intent to sin in that he knew it would be originated by the man and allowed it, or that God originated the intent and thus created the man with the intent God originated? If the former don't you have man "informing God" and if the latter don't you have God authoring sin?God is "first cause" of all things - in a decretive sense
I do not use the term "First Cause" where sinful men would warp its true meaning. Apparently I should not have used here either. You inject the word "originator" where I did not imply it. If you understand First Cause, as you say you do, you would not interject that word; or else you are arguing deceitfully.so you are saying in fact that God is the originator (first cause) of man's sinful intent?
God's decree to allow sin does not result in man informing God. I don't know where you get that.What do you mean by a "decretive" sense? Do you mean God permissively decreed the intent to sin in that he knew it would be originated by the man and allowed it, or that God originated the intent and thus created the man with the intent God originated? If the former don't you have man "informing God" and if the latter don't you have God authoring sin?
God's decree to allow sin does not result in man informing God. I don't know where you get that.
I don't see how Adam's "intent" to sin negates God's omniscience.If God merely permits man to sin, in that man originates the sinful intent, then God must have come to know of that intent being that it didn't originate in him. That would be man informing God, even if through God's foreknowledge of that origination. Understand?
I don't see how Adam's "intent" to sin negates God's omniscience.
if the sinful intent originates apart from God then it must become known by God.
Well, I agree that God permissively decrees sin, but I'm just attempting to get an explanation as to how an evil intent can originate in man without violating the concept of Sovereignty some seem to promote here. I don't think there is probably a sufficient answer from either perspective because its beyond us, but I'm just hoping some will acknowledge the mystery of it all instead of insisting one camp has a monopoly on true divine sovereignty.There is no logical argument that requires that things originating (coming to be) "outside of God", as you put it (again, not my words), necessitates that God must learn of these things or that He did not decree them, having eternal design of them.
Apply this principle to actual sins (murder, child molester, rapist, etc.) and see if it still holds water.The pastor of the church I attended sunday said, "You are not a sinner because you sin...You sin because you are a sinner."