Re: Free will and Omniscience
Posted: Fri Nov 04, 2011 6:48 am
Will not work, for what?The answer you guys are giving will NOT work.
"The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands." (Psalm 19:1)
https://discussions.godandscience.org/
Will not work, for what?The answer you guys are giving will NOT work.
Domokunrox, you have contradicted you own statement and, next, how does your statement line up with the verse from Roman 8 quoted below?domokunrox wrote: …. This is where we come along. It would be absolutely ABSURD to claim that God knew if we would grab the lifesaver or not and it would be even more absurd to claim God already knows if he pulled us to safety.
Romans 8:29, 30c, "Because those of whom he had knowledge before they came into existence, were marked out by him to be made like his Son, so that he might be the first among a band of brothers. And those who were marked out by him were named; and those who were named were given righteousness; and to those to whom he gave righteousness, in the same way he gave glory." BBEdomokunrox wrote: Consider this. We are free to grab the lifesaver if we want. Even if we do, we could do something absolutely idiotic and let it go before he pulls us to safety.
Dom, answer my question about predestination, please.domokunrox wrote:Here's the problem, Rick.
Try telling a skeptic to define something. They don't know, and your could not help the process.
Ouch! You're effectively saying that Paul is contradicting the gospel.domokunrox wrote:You guys aren't getting it.
Paul wrote that. Not saying Paul isn't credible. That's not part of the gospel. Which is the main part.
predestination sounds like an insurance policy. Why do we need that? If we hold on, we will be pulled to safety! Is that not good enough?
What does the bible say on this matter?neo-x wrote:... But my question is, what God knows will happen, can that be changed?
No I'm not!RickD wrote:Ouch! You're effectively saying that Paul is contradicting the gospel.
Ok, I'll play along, with you here. Define what you mean by "if we hold on".
I think this sums it up very nicely. God knows our hearts from before creation and knows how this (human) book will end before it was written. God knew Pharaoh would harden his own heart so God hardened Pharaoh's heart even more and used him to accomplish His purpose. Think of it this way, life is a very complicated, intricate maze full of possible choices but at the end of the maze there are only two exists. God already knows which exist each of us will end up at but the myriad of choices we take to get to the end are up to us. God, knowing which exit each of us will end up at, can influence our choices along the way. The entire trip from beginning to end might seem very long to us (6,000 or billions upon billions of years and counting) but to a timeless God it is virtually, no actually, instantaneous (if that even means anything at all outside of time).narnia4 wrote:God can know a man's heart, even know what a man's heart will be, and free will can still exist.
I think this is the best explanation I've read so far. This fits perfectly with the message of the entire bible, when taken in proper context.I think this sums it up very nicely. God knows our hearts from before creation and knows how this (human) book will end before it was written. God knew Pharaoh would harden his own heart so God hardened Pharaoh's heart even more and used him to accomplish His purpose
Narnia, I respect your reservations, but just to explain things, God being outside of time has no bearing on my argument. He is outside time he knows what he knows, but it is not the past or present that matter here, we are talking about future. And I do not see, how God being outside of time affects what I stated.Ok, this is getting pretty complicated, but I think I at least get what you're saying neo. But now I have to disagree, largely because God is outside time. If God only saw INTO the future, I would agree with you... but with God being outside of time, you could almost say that he is IN the past, present, and future.
Don't want to sound like being ignorant here...I appreciate your response and I think this is a good discussion.Using my example, let's say that the programmer made the AI pick one of those three paths randomly. If he did not KNOW the future in an intimate sense, then knowing what path the AI would choose would mean that he chose the path for him. But what if he DID make it random, but he also had the DeLorean that I saw mentioned earlier. The programmer could know the AI has a "choice", travel forward in time, see the path the AI chose, and he would not have caused that event.
Narnia, I see your point and partially I do agree with you that free will doesn't have to be free will in a libertarian sense and also that determinism is not the answer as some have stated. Yet some of these things are quite confusing and I am certainly no expert on doing this. But some of the points just stuck in head and I am just trying to resolve those. May be some of you have already done that. I am still not fully convinced, but I will think about this. Thank you.And I think I still have a point that free will doesn't have to be free will in a libertarian sense. Even us humans can sometimes have a pretty good idea what a person is going to choose. God can know a man's heart, even know what a man's heart will be, and free will can still exist.
Is it non essential to salvation? Yes
Is it non essential to apologetics? No! Its a big problem! This is all that I really wanted to convey out to you guys.
No, I do not think so. It would only be true if Abraham qualified for that test in the first place. Not trying to put a limit on God's ability to foresee, here. Just saying that some of God's actions are limited or constrained by human factor. I think he would first see what we would do before doing something back. I think God holds back and wait for us to finish our part, so that he can likewise do his.But when I see verse 12's second part, it makes me think that God did not see beyond Abraham's choice until Abraham actually did it or else this whole things become just a formality.
Did God foreknow He would test Abraham?