Thanx Narnia, I looked at the links. And to the best of my reasoning I think, there is some problem still. Look if middle knowledge is the answer, then the flaw remains, it merely shifts from macro to micro, it is just a matter of probabilities. And to me this kind of an answer is a random moving goal post. No matter what I do, the goal post is shifted and I am told God already knew that. I really makes no sense from where I stand and see.Craig would say middle knowledge. You make the choice, but he knows all possible choices in all possible worlds and he knows which choice you will choose.
narnia4
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For example, someone threatens me at gunpoint
1. God knows what will I do in any circumstance.
2. In my head at the same time, I am thinking about yanking the gun from him and then shoot him.
3. I can't decide whether I should go for it or not.
4. Now God knows, what will happen, if I yank the gun or stay as it is and get shot.
5. If I yank the gun and then move on to shoot him, God already knew that.
6. Now where is my choice? what if I just yank the gun and move away? did God also knew that.
7. If so, then God didn't know what I would do exactly, he only knows I could do it either way:
A. I could yank the gun and shoot him
B. I could yank the gun and walk away.
In a given circumstance, where I have two choices and only one I can carry out, for God to know that particular one, he must know what I will finally choose, God can't know both at the same time to be true, because in my free will, I am the one who finally decides which one is true, and God's knowledge has to be compatible to that. You see, God may know how many choices I have, but that is not enough, he has to know what particular choice would I carry out. This becomes incompatible with "God knows what choice I will make in any circumstance." This bring us back to my original point, if he knew already the final action, it was not mere guess, it has to be true or God's knowledge is not accurate, mere probabilities.
As I said above, for a future event to be true, it has to be true at all times in God's knowledge. And since it is in God's knowledge before I am even born, then it is not me who decided that particular matter and hence I have no say in it. If God knows, I will shoot the guy, then he knows it from immaterial time, outside of it. And since he knows it already, it has to be true, or else he wouldn't know it. It must happen, that is why he knows it will happen. He is not guessing. And if he knows I will do a certain action in a given event then, I really have no choice. I will always get to choose what God had known I will chose.
This way God's knowledge stays firm but it over rides free will. Because no matter what I do, in the end my will has to be the same as God's knowledge. If so then I am not even aware of the choice or should I say, in this case choice is just an illusion. Because out of the above two choices, I will either choose A) or B) I can't choose both since both are in a conflict, You can say God knows the two choices, I am saying that is not enough, he has to know what particular choice I would make. And if he knows it, then it has to be true, it will happen or God's knowledge is faulty.
Did God know always that Charles Manson would do what he did or Ted Bundy would be a serial killer. This is a loaded statement and one which any atheist would be too happy to take and smash around. Because down this road, God becomes the source of evil as well. He allows evil, as a matter of fact, it means evil was already there in God's thoughts before evil was in material form. If God always knew Lucifer would sin and be the first sinner, the fallen, the devil, then he knew it from infinity, before he even created Lucifer. So how does the evil factor came in? The bible says Lucifer became proud, it was his decision. just like Eli the priest, chose his sons above God. it was his choice. But this can only be true when God doesn't see past their choices, unless they act on them (as I am proposing) OR if God already knew that Lucifer would sin, then Lucifer will sin, no matter what happens. Why? because God's omniscience is not probabilities but actual facts. The only reason God knew before hand that Lucifer would sin, is because he will sin. And if that is true then Lucifer has no choice, he may not even be aware of that choice and that makes God unjust. He would have to sin because God knows he will before hand and since God knows it beforehand, it must be true. free will goes out of the window here because the bottom line is, it will happen as God knew.
But by your perspective another side problem arises, If God already knew my action, then I cannot change them, since it will be in conflict with God's knowledge and therefore that cannot happen. I didn't decide what I will do, since God already knows what I will do. This way I can say, "hey, what wrong did I do, I just did as it was in your thoughts and since your thoughts would be true always, I can't change what you thought before hand" so I am not the culprit here. I had no will of mine this way. Okay, so is God the culprit? certainly not, he knew what I will do, but he didn't make that choice for me, he can not, it conflicts with his nature and his free will gift to us. My question is, then who made that choice before I was even born? I will let you guys decide how to answer this.
Back to my point, Lets take another example, take Paul the apostle
Paul writes in Gal 1:15
"But when God,
and called me by his grace, was pleased-"who set me apart from birth
Look here, Paul affirms that he was chosen before hand, this means he was predestined to be the apostle Paul to the gentiles. Now, on the road to Damascus, may I ask, did Paul had a choice in rejecting God? Free will stipulates that he can very well reject God's plan, regardless of the fact that God chose him before birth. You can say that God always knew Paul would convert on the way to Damascus, sure but he can not confirm this, unless Paul chooses to do so. Up till then it is just a good guess. Because if God can confirm that Paul will change, then by definition, it would have to be true, before it ever happened. And thus Paul will change no matter what happens. And then again, where does that leave free will? Paul can not refuse. Had he refused, wouldn't that cancel out God's foreknowledge that he will be the apostle to the Gentiles. And look we are not talking about God guessing, if God knew before hand (as your view says) then he will always be the apostle. That kicks free will out, fellas, admit it or not. You can't have it both ways, God's foreknowledge can not be in error, can it?. And as you say it must not affect free will either, but the kicker is, if Paul chooses to refuse (as free will stipulates) then God's foreknowledge is in error. Because in this case, you would say, God always knew Paul would refuse, that again kicks out free will.
The only way this makes sense to me, is that God does not see past our choice unless we make them, except prophecy. This is the only way he can reward each according to their work, out of their own choice. That is the only way his will and ours coincide and co-exist, without overruling each other. I am not saying he can't see the future, he can but if he does, it will cancel out the free will stipulation, because WHAT HE KNOWS BEFORE HAND HAS TO BE TRUE AT ALL TIMES.