I don't think so at all. My presuppositions are not Calvinistic, but based upon biblical axioms. If something does not fit biblically, yet does fit Calvinism, the latter must be rejected or, if possible, reformulated to fit the biblical truths. That said, I believe that my presuppositions which revolve around a wholly God-centered bible, inevitably lead to
If I strictly used dictionaries for biblical doctrines, I would always go to a better source, ideally the OED, or at least the Webster's Unabridged:
will
Function:
verb
Inflected Form(s):
past would;
or archaic second singular wouldst;
or would·est present singular & plural will
or archaic second singular wilt
Etymology: Middle English
wille, will, wil wish, wishes, desire, desires, intend, intends (1st & 3d singular present indicative, past
wolde, wold, infin.
willen), from Old English
wile, wille (past
wolde, infin.
wyllan); akin to Old High German
willu wish, will,
wili wishes, will (infin.
wellen, wollen), Old Norse
vilja wish, will,
vill wishes, will (infin.
vilja),
velja to choose, Gothic
wiljau wish, will,
wili wishes, will (infin.
wiljan),
waljan to choose, Latin
velle to wish, Greek (Doric) Sanskrit
voti he chooses, likes
transitive verb : to be inclined to
: [SIZE=-1]CHOOSE[/SIZE] <call it what you
will> -- often used in the form
would with an object clause <
would that I were young again> <I
would to heaven I had never seen him>
verbal auxiliary
1 -- used to express desire, choice, willingness, consent, or in negative constructions refusal <the immortal gods
will have no part in this affair -- John Buchan> <perverse set of facial muscles that
will not, like those of other people, interpret the language of his soul -- Emily Brontë> <how long
will we put up with the ... refusal of refrigerators to fit --
Pencil Points> <could find no one who
would take the job> <if we
willwill you please stop that racket>
2 -- used to express frequent, customary, or habitual action or natural tendency or disposition <has a quick temper and
will get angry over nothing> <
would fall asleep reading his newspaper> <
will sit for hours watching the sea> <
will work one day and loaf the next>
3 a -- used to express simple futurity <much like a delayed action bomb that
will not explode for half a generation -- C.P.Taft> <cherish the belief that some day a perfect society
will banish evil -- Crane Brinton> <tomorrow morning I
will wake up in this first-class hotel suite -- Tennessee Williams> <have not employed it and probably never
will -- R.W.Bliss> <some other time we
will say what it was --
Notes & Queries> <list ...
will be sent as usual for a stamped and addressed envelope -- May L. Becker> <cannot foresee what
will happen, but a study of past changes may give us an idea as to what may happen -- C.E.P.Brooks> <problem of corruption and morality
will remain very real and earnest -- Estes Kefauver>
b -- used to express simple action or intention without conscious reference to future time <quite a famous view ... a good many people
will stop and take pictures of it -- G.W.Brace> <we
will now illustrate the procedure in detail -- Z.S.Harris> <I
will give you two propositions for the year 1778: a little learning was a dangerous thing, and so was being an American -- A.W.Griswold>
4 -- used to express capability or sufficiency <square pegs
will not fit in round holes> <this
will do if there is nothing better> <back seat
willwill just run to it -- John Buchan> <this
will serve to illustrate the kind of problem -- F.N.Robinson> <found that his old rubbers
would not go over his new shoes> <three yards of cloth
will make a skirt and jacket>
5 -- used to express probability or recognition and often equivalent to the simple verb <that
will be the milkman at the back door> <this house with the green shutters
will be theirs> <she
would have been about twenty when she married> <discover a plant growing and clinging close to the rocks. This
will be the walking fern or walking leaf -- Anne Dorrance> <glass that hides the pendulum
will often display a fine example of primitive painting -- Ellwood Kirby>
6 a -- used to express determination, insistence, persistence, or willfulness <I have made up my mind to go and go I
will> <for some perverse reason he
will put his worst foot forward> <had what the doctors
will call influenze, as though there were only one form of it -- Lord Dunsany> <police are excellent fellows, but ... they
will hare off after motive, which is a matter for psychologists -- Dorothy Sayers>
b -- used to express inevitability <accidents
will happen> <what
will be,
willwill out>
7 -- used to express a command, exhortation, or injunction <you
will do as I say, at once> <color arrangements
will be as prescribed in instructions issued by the Commanding General --
Army Regulations & Ordinances> <proposing ... that all disputes ...
will be referred to an impartial tribunal -- T.F.Reynolds> <with his petition the applicant
will
intransitive verb
1 : have a wish or desire
: be inclined or disposed
: be pleased <Lord, if thou
wilt, thou canst make me clean -- Mt 8:2 (Authorized Version)> <for better, for worse, and whether we
will or no --
advt> <factors for which man is responsible and which he can control or change if he
will -- L.A.White>
2 archaic : will go <thither
will I then -- Sir Walter Scott>
-
if you will : if you wish to call it that <a kind of preoccupation, or obsession
if you will -- Louis Auchincloss>
-
will I, nill I or will he, nill he or will ye, nill ye : whether I, he, or you will it or not
: [SIZE=-1]WILLY-NILLY[/SIZE]
As you can see, statements like "common definition" of this or that are not "common" and especially in the context of creaturely 'will', there is more at play that mere 'ability to decide'.
I have asked Bob to elaborate a bit further since he has made statements elsewhere that, on their surface, conflict with what he stated in his response to me. I think Bob knows why I am asking for this clarification, and I am giving him the opportunity to make his position crystal clear so I don't go off in a direction that he would later retort that I had misunderstood him. In other words, I am trying to be fair here. Elsewhere Knight stated that I was nit-picking on this point. I don't think Bob would agree, as he no doubt understands my motivations for asking and I hope appreciates my extending to him an opportunity to crisp up his thinking on the matter.
It is my belief, perhaps wrongly so, that given the topic, Bob has been doing some careful thinking, praying, etc., and has tweaked his position from that which he stated to Lamerson. We all do this when asked to defend what we believe in writing. When crafting my own responses to Bob's 50 questions, there were several things that I needed to refine in my own thinking, for I was unaware of some of my own misunderstandings until I saw them on paper. Which is why I am grateful for having had the chance to spend the time answering those questions.