I'm finding a need to question a lot here about where you get one idea and another. Some of this to reveal leaps from inference vs. what is blatantly clear (inductive vs deductive Bible study). Some of this that you may further elaborate your meaning. -Lon
Why? He is Creator of everything. Why would He even 'want' that ability? It is everything against His own nature. If so, isn't there a bit of God 'wanting' man to fall in your scenario? Why or how not?
You mean the tree of knowledge? Was that the actual purpose of the tree? To 'lead Adam and Eve out of His presence? How much of this is speculation on your part?
Right. To me, just the prohibition, which He was careful to give, would have sufficed, right? Didn't He create Adam and Eve to obey - follow? Or had that rebellious will already been in place? If not, then you are back to my scenario where the serpent is at fault and God didn't plan any of this by desire. Planned for? Yes. Planned? Then you are about in the same place as the extreme Calvinists who say God did this (I think). If not, I'm not seeing the difference. It seems like you guys are saying God purposefully made man to 'be able to sin, as a gift.'
To right here, we are in agreement and I'd have said all the same...continuing...
:think: Genesis 3:1 "...
was more crafty...you won't die..."
1 Timothy 2:14
Remember this part in a moment, because it confuses me...
What choice did God give? I think one can infer that, but He is
rather asking a question and describing Cain's condition isn't He?
I'm a bit confused if that was the point, because you'd just said God gave Cain a choice (for instance). Is 'giving a choice' the same as 'created?' Sorry I'm not getting it.
As with a few questions above, some are asked because I'm not seeing it in the text, but these latter are being asked because I'm trying to follow. For me, the really important part of this discussion is about 1) free will (and for me a distinction between it and just 'will'). Then 2) about how we can sin with something that is proposed as a 'gift from God.' As Stripe has said, there is no verse that says we were given a 'free will' but that such is inferred from scripture by free-will theists. That alone needs a lot of scripture to cover it or it is philosophy/reasoning alone that asserts it. The other part that is difficult in this is that the Open Theist himself/herself either states or beats-around-the-bush that God planned for man to sin AND gave him/her the 'ability' (as a gift) to do so. I've heard Enyart say that God HAD to do so or we'd not have genuine relationship, but for me, this infers that Adam and Eve were incapable of genuine relationship until they chose to sin. It just doesn't make logical sense nor seem to fit scriptures to me.
I think 'love' is its own force. That's why, I believe Proverbs 22:6 says that when a child grows up, they 'will not depart.' It is about what we pour into them. My children really don't have much of a choice. They love, because they were loved. 1 John 4:19
There may be a sense where there is value in 'chosen' love, but I'm convinced God chose me. Even with my wife, she chose me, which made me love her back. I use the word 'made' here because while 'choice' is part of our make-up, I'm convinced it has nothing really to do with relationship. For me, commitment and single-minded in God is the glue that holds my marriage together. Lest I take any credit (I can't) that glue is Christ. Christians in more than name only, are new-creatures. There is a Spiritual awakening that doesn't provide choice, but rather direction and motivation toward that goal, which is Christ Jesus. Because it is single-minded (albeit where flesh wars against it) then choice is but one, always: 1 Corinthians 10:31 Colossians 3:17
Thank you for talking a few moments. Even if the disagreement remains, I believe covering and understanding terms as well as reexamining them is a good use of our time. In Him -Lon