Ok, I've thought it through and there was a lot going on in your statements.
There is definitely a comparison to be made for sure.
You say that God would not be a bystander. (I'm not sure if you say that with tongue-in-cheek at me, since obviously on Molinism I don't see God as a bystander)
However, I disagree with you and believe God would be a bystander if:
1) God did not actively participate in the forming of this universe or life
2) God knowing all possible universes just "sparked" one into existence along with all our free decisions, etc.
(I think you actually think God would be a bystander too, and that you were probably just trying to tease me into seeing an error with my own beliefs).
You write:
- Neo could just claim, consistent with K's beliefs, that God knew all possible worlds--which would include all possible mutations--and chose to actualize this particular one. On that view, God isn't "guiding" the evolutionary process at all. It really is unguided (just like our choices really are free), but God is hardly a bystander!
That is true, except the aforementioned part in bold about God
not being a bystander.
HOWEVER, it is true
if and only if my Molinist beliefs have God foreseeing all worlds, choosing one
and that's that. No more further involvement.
But, that is not what I believe (nor Craig with his more modern Molinist view).
God doesn't just select one world, but is actively creating every moment in virtue of His living alongside us in time. (another belief of mine I'm sure you're aware to -- that God was timeless and then at creation gave up His timelessness and entered into time).
So on my Molinist view, God enters into temporality at his first creative act in virtue of His true relations with His Creation.
Thus, God really is personal, along side us in life, living with us throughout every situation we're in, sustaining everything in existence and every new moment.
That is a big important difference that was left out in your comparison.
On an atemporal/timeless view however, God stands afar off.
He can not be with us in time, because to do so would impinge His timelessness.
Thus, God cannot actually know tensed facts since God doesn't not know where in time we actually are (that this moment I'm at is 30/01/2015 2:32 PM AEST). God might now that at that time I was writing this, but He cannot know that that moment is
NOW because God is not in time.
There is also actually perhaps more of a correlation between Neo-X's view of God (heck, we haven't even had his own clarifications yet but based upon what we're all assuming here) AND a view of God that keeps Him timeless. Especially if any Molinist believes God foresees all possible worlds, chooses one
AND believes that God is timeless...
that would be a better comparison to Neo-X's views (or as we're understanding them to be). In such views, I believe God
IS actually a bystander. Deistic even.
And if I've left anyone confused, please open up a new thread.
Happy to discuss and unpack anything further.