lukecash12
New member
i like lukecash12's answer in post 3
Hey, thanks bro. If you don't mind me asking: where do you personally fall on these issues? Are you an Arminian too?
Soli deo gloria.
i like lukecash12's answer in post 3
Hey, thanks bro. If you don't mind me asking: where do you personally fall on these issues? Are you an Arminian too?
Soli deo gloria.
If God foreknows all future things, then everything has to happen in the way that it is foreknown, then those involved have to participate in the way in which they are foreknown to take part. And if those involved have to participate as foreknown, then they are not free to make choices, thus not accountable for their choices.
God’s perfect foreknowledge seems logically to negate true human freedom. The Reformers recognized this by the following quotation from Luther: “For if we believe it to be true that God foreknows and predestines all things, that he can neither be mistaken in his foreknowledge nor hindered in his predestination, and that nothing takes place but as he wills it, then on the testimony of reason itself there cannot be any free choice in man or angel or any creature” [Martin Luther, On the Bondage of the Will, Conclusion].
*If God foreknows all future things, then everything has to happen in the way that it is foreknown, then those involved have to participate in the way in which they are foreknown to take part. And if those involved have to participate as foreknown, then they are not free to make choices, thus not accountable for their choices.
God’s perfect foreknowledge seems logically to negate true human freedom. The Reformers recognized this by the following quotation from Luther: “For if we believe it to be true that God foreknows and predestines all things, that he can neither be mistaken in his foreknowledge nor hindered in his predestination, and that nothing takes place but as he wills it, then on the testimony of reason itself there cannot be any free choice in man or angel or any creature” [Martin Luther, On the Bondage of the Will, Conclusion].
For what it's worth I also found your answer that Patrick Jane refers to as a good one
The argument that God is outside of time is a cop out. Calvin used it too. Time itself is only a mental construct. If God wants to think of himself as doing things sequentially then why shouldn't he? Asserting that God is outside of time is the same as asserting that he is unable to do anything because 'things' (see my first post) can only exist if they have structures. And events can only exist if they can be distinguished from other events happening before and after them. That is after all what 'event' means.
But all that siad, I fail to see how any discussion of God's knowledge can be had without first understanding what we mean by knowledge. For example, when you say 'foreknows all future things', that sounds very vague. What 'things' are we talking about here? Unless people can answer this, I don't see the point in talking about it. And indeed, I believe that discussion will continue to be unfinished and contradictory, as it has been for centuries, for as long as people refuse to grapple with this.
If God foreknows all future things, then everything has to happen in the way that it is foreknown, then those involved have to participate in the way in which they are foreknown to take part. And if those involved have to participate as foreknown, then they are not free to make choices, thus not accountable for their choices.
God’s perfect foreknowledge seems logically to negate true human freedom. The Reformers recognized this by the following quotation from Luther: “For if we believe it to be true that God foreknows and predestines all things, that he can neither be mistaken in his foreknowledge nor hindered in his predestination, and that nothing takes place but as he wills it, then on the testimony of reason itself there cannot be any free choice in man or angel or any creature” [Martin Luther, On the Bondage of the Will, Conclusion].
How might I approach this? Those "things" that God knows are ontological truths, governing the fundamental nature of reality.
And, what would be the point of prayer? Why would God want to hear our requests, our pain, our sorrow? Would not prayer then become an irritant? A form of judgment on our part that we don't like what God has done and is doing?
The argument that God is outside of time is a cop out. Calvin used it too. Time itself is only a mental construct. If God wants to think of himself as doing things sequentially then why shouldn't he? Asserting that God is outside of time is the same as asserting that he is unable to do anything because 'things' (see my first post) can only exist if they have structures. And events can only exist if they can be distinguished from other events happening before and after them. That is after all what 'event' means.
If God foreknows all future things, then everything has to happen in the way that it is foreknown, then those involved have to participate in the way in which they are foreknown to take part. And if those involved have to participate as foreknown, then they are not free to make choices, thus not accountable for their choices.
God’s perfect foreknowledge seems logically to negate true human freedom. The Reformers recognized this by the following quotation from Luther: “For if we believe it to be true that God foreknows and predestines all things, that he can neither be mistaken in his foreknowledge nor hindered in his predestination, and that nothing takes place but as he wills it, then on the testimony of reason itself there cannot be any free choice in man or angel or any creature” [Martin Luther, On the Bondage of the Will, Conclusion].
Hey, thanks bro. If you don't mind me asking: where do you personally fall on these issues? Are you an Arminian too?
Soli deo gloria.
The point of prayer is to stay under God so as to not veer from his path and presence. You shouldn't pray for desires of the flesh.And, what would be the point of prayer? Why would God want to hear our requests, our pain, our sorrow? Would not prayer then become an irritant? A form of judgment on our part that we don't like what God has done and is doing?
The argument that God is outside of time is a cop out. Calvin used it too. Time itself is only a mental construct. If God wants to think of himself as doing things sequentially then why shouldn't he? Asserting that God is outside of time is the same as asserting that he is unable to do anything because 'things' (see my first post) can only exist if they have structures. And events can only exist if they can be distinguished from other events happening before and after them. That is after all what 'event' means.
Physicists would disagree with much of what you've said here about time
and I think that God being outside of time would actually make him able to do 'everything' as opposed to 'nothing' but clearly you disagree and that's fine. This is pure ideology. You can't really be wrong
True to this point BUT we must define free between us. What you and I mean by it are very different concepts, I believe. I am not 'free' of gravity though I may defy it.If God foreknows all future things, then everything has to happen in the way that it is foreknown, then those involved have to participate in the way in which they are foreknown to take part. And if those involved have to participate as foreknown, then they are not free to make choices,
Culpability≠ Freewill by any necessity. It is just 1 way that culpability 'can' exist. For instance, I 'can' defy the laws of gravity but that doesn't mean I am 'free' from it. I am culpable to gravity and thus, will pay dues according to its laws (culpability) even though "I cannot be free (freewill equivocation) from it." Therefore (hopefully) I've demonstrated that freewill is not necessary for culpability. Rather, a disregard/rejection of gravity laws and principles, demands a set of ensuing consequences.]...thus not accountable for their choices.
Yes it does. You are correct, but note the difference between our understandings of the will as pertaining to freedom. It does need discussion because our 'conclusions' over that matter are different, not the observation. IOW, we are coming away from what you just said as true, with different ideas of what 'negation of free will' means. I believe you are seeing it as a 'removal' of what exists in you and I am seeing it as a removal of a faulty idea that never existed in the first place.God’s perfect foreknowledge seems logically to negate true human freedom.
"Free" here is the difficult point to make, and make proper sense of, for we go separate ways, all of us, in conclusions over the matter of the statement.The Reformers recognized this by the following quotation from Luther: “For if we believe it to be true that God foreknows and predestines all things, that he can neither be mistaken in his foreknowledge nor hindered in his predestination, and that nothing takes place but as he wills it, then on the testimony of reason itself there cannot be any free choice in man or angel or any creature” [Martin Luther, On the Bondage of the Will, Conclusion].
Good question but it doesn't negate the counsel of God. That is, whether the question is answerable or not, doesn't really mean anything one way or the other, HOWEVER your question has assumptions in it such as "shouldn't" "then why" and "He should have..." that must be addressed to correct your line of questioning and thinking prior to addressing the main question.Something I've always been curious about: if God is omniscient and knows the future then why was the flood necessary? Shouldn't he have seen man's depravity coming and done something before it got so bad that he had to wipe everyone out? The same goes for Adam and Eve. He should have known that they were going to eat from the tree right?
Why?
It's not just ideology. It's logic. Physicists would agree with me that causation is a mental construct. Wouldn't you also?
A minority of physicists would yes. These same physicists believe that all points in time throughout history lie together and that our senses construct timelines to make sense of this.
Sure, I go along wth that. But.But most consider time to be intertwined with space in a 4 dimensional construct known as space-time. This idea was formulated by Einstein himself.
I find the concept of a timeless God to be logical even though i have no clue how God does it or what it's like. it is a leap of faith among many we take as Christians. i disagree that it's the same as asserting He is unable to do 'anything' or 'things' - God doesn't need the structure(s) that our finite minds need, i imagine.
A minority of physicists would yes. These same physicists believe that all points in time throughout history lie together and that our senses construct timelines to make sense of this. But most consider time to be intertwined with space in a 4 dimensional construct known as space-time. This idea was formulated by Einstein himself. This is where the possibility of things like wormholes become physically possible: by bending and warping space-time to travel distances that are light years apart in mere moments.
I don't buy that.
Sure, I go along wth that. But.
1) I was referring to quantum theory, suggesting that macro events of cause-effect are indeed mental constructs, whilst the reality is of myriad randomly generated quantum events.
2) 4d Space-time is itself a construct. All Einstein is saying is that because light is the reference speed, then all other movement (and communication) is relative. The 4d space-time is just a visual tool that helps some people visualise the effect of relativity.
In reality, time itself is a construct, not because events do not happen sequentially but because they do! Time doesn't flow at 1 hour per hour. It is just an agreement we all make so that we get to work at the same time and so that we can say that the train is late or we arrived early. Clocks don't measure time because time doesn't exist. I am sure that Einstein would agree with this. 4D space time does not mean that time is a physical dimension of the universe. The reason why we are able to conceive of time is that the universe is homogeneous. The same kind of clock works in the same way in one place as it does in another. And give or take a micro-second or three, the Earth rotates at the same speed every day.