Thank you. Mulled this over last night rather than responding. Appreciate the insight.
Okay, so there's no way I can respond to all of your post. I'd be here till Christmas 2026!
Freewill is generally hand in hand with theodicy in the sense that freewill is their answer to God justified. As Derf said, God, in freewill, isn't the Author of sin, but the Author of the switch (ability to do otherwise as the quintessential definition of freewill). An observation: Theodicy tends to tie its arguments (ala above in proposition) to only God interacting 'in' the universe He created in its propositions. I'm not sure if it then, is only relevant to discussion within the context of the universe then, on point. IOW, I don't believe Theodicy tried to answer the bigger picture of evil existing before there was a universe, and may be 'land-locked' for such discussion.
There are several theodicies that people have formulated. They seem to all mention free will but any of them produced by Catholics or Calvinists or Methodists universally give mere lip service to free will and leave flagrant contradictions wide open and intentionally unresolved. In short, the various attempts to account for the existence of evil make no attempt to do so in a rationally coherent manner. It's just dogma.
Where does your specific definition come from?
My mind.
Do you mean, where did I learn it? What difference does that make? It wasn't from a single source. Besides, did I not quote scripture that draws the exact same parallel?
I think it serves, but does there have to be 'life' for a thing against it to be evil?
God is life, Lon. There has never been a time when God did not exist and thus there has never been a time when life did not exist. God was good before He created the universe, right?
When you read the verses, especially John 15:5 Colossians 1:16-20, Philippians 2:13, Acts 17:28 how do you reconcile?
John 15:5 “I am the vine, you are the branches. He who abides in Me, and I in him, bears much fruit; for without Me you can do nothing.
Jesus isn't teaching that you can't do anything at all whatsoever. Jesus isn't teaching that "Without Me you can't murder your neighbor's grandmother with a pare of scissors." (Hehe! Sorry to be so graphic there! I watched a show on Investigation Discovery where some guy did that!)
Also, Christ's statement is a bit of hyperbole in the same sense that "all good things comes from above" is so. The idea isn't to communicate control but of humility toward God who has granted us life and thereby the opportunity to do rightly.
Colossians1:16 For by Him all things were created that are in heaven and that are on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or principalities or powers. All things were created through Him and for Him. 17 And He is before all things, and in Him all things consist. 18 And He is the head of the body, the church, who is the beginning, the firstborn from the dead, that in all things He may have the preeminence.
19 For it pleased the Father that in Him all the fullness should dwell, 20 and by Him to reconcile all things to Himself, by Him, whether things on earth or things in heaven, having made peace through the blood of His cross.
The short answer here is that I don't read the bible as though I'm an attorney reading paperwork from a legal proceeding. As such, I do not take general statements and attempt to apply them to every specific.
Philippians 2:13 for it is God who works in you both to will and to do for His good pleasure.
Well, same answer as on the last passage but also the dispensational context is important here. We are identified in Christ, indeed we have been crucified in Christ and it no longer we who live but Christ who lives His life through us BY FAITH! (Galatians 2:20) It is that "BY FAITH" part that is the key. There is clearly supernatural/spiritual stuff going on in the life of a believer but it isn't at all the same as being hung on strings like puppets.
Acts 17:28 for in Him we live and move and have our being, as also some of your own poets have said, ‘For we are also His offspring.’
Once again, its about not taking general statements too far and applying in a manner that is not intended. Generally speaking, it is quite true that God is everywhere and is as close to us as breathing. It is not necessary to point out every possible exception when making such statements. Again, we are not lawyers reading a legal contract here where such specificity is needed but rather we are reading a history book where someone is attempting to convey big ideas in an understandable way.
Intuitively, we aren't God. This alone has me on page with your proposition in that we are 'entities' and as such are capable. I believe, at this venture, I'm on page with the general overarching thought that God made us somewhat 'free' but free has all kinds of broad-stroke definitions that get in the way imho, of what you are actually driving at: A man with a culpable will. I told Derf, I don't think it is a 'switch' God made man with but with you 'an ability' however with no suggestion of 'to do otherwise' implicit in the gift. IOW, the way you get to a theodicy that truly has God separate from sin, is making a wrench, not to be used as a hammer. For me then, the ascent is rather on 'ability' (analogy in a moment).
Your use, if I assess correctly, has ability and free used interchangeably. I believe they are not the same thing (analogy to follow).
Simply and briefly: Freewill ever has language that at least implies God 'made a wrench that carried the implicit idea that it be used as a hammer, even though that'd break it. At this venture in conversation (couple of times this week in conversation with you), I don't believe freewill theists intend to imply God made a wrench with choice, but 'ability' without conflating the two as inseparable. It seems to me, at this venture, that 'ability' doesn't make a thing so. Some yet might think that making me a separate entity (not free but with free qualities), led to sin thereby God is yet the Maker of the switch. With Derf, I use rather the analogy of putting a paperclip in an electric socket with 'thou shalt not' as akin to 'Do not eat of the tree or you shall die.' By analogy, the tree of the knowledge of Good an Evil is like the fuse box in creation. "Don't touch it. Danger!" Crossing wires is the 'evil' akin to eating of the tree. There is no switch, nor intent by God that man should ever touch wires that are good and functioning 'the way they are.' Thus a wrench, made to turn things, not beat them. A set of wires, not to be crossed: dangerous. And a tree not to be eaten. It rather than 'ability to do otherwise' is just 'ability' in created intent. God then doesn't have to make man with 'an ability to do otherwise' but rather makes man with hands that 'can' change wires, but without intent that He should do so. Freewill theism has God 'necessarily' having to create man 'to do otherwise' as an option. I don't believe evil needs that switch. Rather it seems at this venture, that simply 'ability' is how man accomplished sin, like 'don't use that wrench' or 'don't cross those wires' or 'don't eat of that tree.'
Satan may have been given more instruction and responsiblity than Adam and Eve. He may have been made as the good and evil electrician, according to illustration. We are not with but speculation, however such in analogy allows for the fall, completely without God's intent. Derf has pretty much said "no, I'll stick with Freewill paradigms" at this venture. As such, perhaps freewill theism is wholesale and cannot entertain the separation of 'abilty' from 'to do otherwise' as the object, point, purpose of man's misuse. :idunno:
You definitely need to drop these analogies. They don't make any sense. I read this three times and it just does not work. You are overthinking it by a mile.
It's not complicated at all. The concept of choice presupposes that there are alternatives to choose from. The reason that the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil existed was to provide an alternative to God. But the existence of alternatives from which to choose is only meaningful if the one who chooses could have chosen otherwise. Which is to say that his choice was not
determined by someone or something other than himself; that his ability to choose was real and that it was really his.
There's insufficient time to get detailed here but this actually gets to what it means to be you. Is there a such thing as you? Does
you exist? What does it mean to be you? Cogito Ergo Sum - right?! Do you think? It is YOU doing the thinking?
The degree to which you minimize or downgrade the idea that we have free will, is the degree to which your answer to such questions is, "No".
Let me ask a question (just because it illustrates a need to further investigate both of our assumptions in opposition).
There are only so many spices in the world. Do you believe there is a flavor combination that would catch God unaware?
I have no reason to believe that God has spent the time to discover every combination of spices. (There are, by the way, a literally infinite number of such combinations.) And so, yeah, its possible that someone might produce a mixture that God had never considered. Not that it would "catch Him unaware" which is a phrase that seems rather loaded with the implication that God would somehow break if someone came up with something that was new to God.
I ask simply because of this: our ability to know is limited and we argue from that limitation.
God's ability to know is also limited, although not in regard to something as inanimate as spices. God cannot know the unknowable any more than we can. There is far less that is unknowable to God than is unknowable for us but that's not quite the point. The point is that God does not know everything as Plato believed.
We have plenty left to learn, but is there anything in the universe God did not know when He knows the content of every element and its interaction?
I do not understand people's felt need to overstate everything when applied to God. Why is it so hard to believe that God is a person who is not so radically different from us that we cannot related to Him. We have been created for the express purpose of have a relationship with God but everyone seems to be afraid that accepting Him as a person who we can actually do that with somehow demotes Him from Godhood.
It simply is not necessary to believe that God has sat down and considered and remembers and keeps track of every conceivable chemical reaction, mixture of spices and every other mundane triviality that has, does or might ever exist.
Tale of Two Cities: Not new, but the 'arrangement' of the story wasn't done before. In what way would we say we'd never seen anything in Tale of Two Cities before?
You will not proceed any further in your understanding of either God or the scriptures unless or until you stop thinking like a paralegal doing research for a legal proceeding.
Besides, how is this question even relevant? Your point is, in essence, "There's nothing new under the Sun.", so what? That biblical saying and the fact that Charles Dickens didn't invent the English language doesn't mean that his books weren't original creations of his own making. Does the painter not create art because he wasn't the one who invented paint? Shall we not give Bach credit for his magnificent musical creations because he did not invent music?
Classic definition? Will: Desire, inclination, choice. When AMR and Freewill theists used to debate this on TOL, AMR used 'inclination' as opposed to 'free.' I believe I'd augment will with "the impetus of a person to do an action." Matthew 8: 1-3 "Master, if you are willing, you can cleanse me...." Point: It isn't just 'ability to choose' but also 'the impetus for doing the ability.' Would you say that will 'is' or is driven by, a valuation? Asking another way: is will the 'ability' or the impetus 'for' the ability? It seems will is the 'impetus' for an ability.
The will may include aspects other than the ability to do otherwise but that would only serve to muddy the water. The point is that the ability to do otherwise is a necessary condition. Put another way, the concept of "the will" presupposes the ability to do or to do otherwise (i.e. to choose). If you want to add the concept of desire then you are free to do so - or not.
I'm unsure Sander's theory is sound. To choose is fine. Love carries two items necessary for it's description: both as a condition (no action) and then a result of the action. Sanders and others insist that there be an alternative for love 1) to exist and also 2) as an action. Here is the problem: the definition of love itself MUST thereby contain evil/not-love to even ascertain the defintion!
Umm, what?
Your sentence stucture needs work. I can't follow this.
It means you cannot have an adequate definition of love without 'not love' as part of the definition in comparison.
Yes you can! This is like saying that you can't define light without including darkness in the definition. Define love and then it's negation is the definition of hate, not the other way around.
It'd makes more sense to say "choice to do otherwise" is a meaningful contrast toward the difference between love and something else" rather than say it is needful for Love's definition. "To do otherwise" hasn't been part of any freewill theists preferred definition of love to date.
You are focusing too closely on the word "definition". When I use the phrase "by definition" I am not saying that I have just offered a definition but that I am making an argument that is based on the term's definition. It is specifically called a "by definition argument". The point isn't to have offered a concise definition of the term but to have engaged the term's definition in order to make the argument.
So, I am not saying that the ability to choose is required to be mentioned in a formal definition of the term "love". I am saying that the concept of love presupposes the ability to choose, that the ability to choose is a necessary condition for love to happen. This is true of ALL MORAL issues. If an action is not chosen then the act is no more moral that is a clock's reading of noon.
If you need one, a good definition of love, at least in the context of this discussion, would be...
Love: to willfully act in the best interest of another
Thank you Clete. None of my comments are dismissive, they are rather wrestling with the content of your post and I appreciate the service. I believe these worth our efforts, if not to convince the other, at least to bring needed depth for our own positions and the needed walk in the other's shoes upon the difference. Thank you for that service. In Him -Lon