Imago Deo doesn't demand that. Simply, man is created with a sense of 'other'/consciousness. Freewill suggest independence/autonomy, but they are not the same thing. It is rather that in the knowledge that we exist and "aren't" God, we are separate. Separate doesn't equal 'free' exactly but such a word can be part of these discussions. The problem with 'free' especially as a gift is the definition of free 'to do otherwise.' Autonomy, consciousness doesn't need "freedom 'from' God."
Whether it
needs it or not, "autonomy"
means freedom from God's law (specifically "self-law"). An autonomous person can have or not have consciousness of others. Consciousness of others can exhibit itself in either love or not love (hate, for instance). I don't see why consciousness of others
is somehow imago dei, though I would agree it is a necessary component.
It is problematic to what is actually the gift, not an ability, a switch, a choice, but an identity and consciousness. The 'switch' isn't the intention of God, but rather created by a being, created in God's image. I yet believe the serpent was instrumental to explaining the fall, but this allows us to get into the original sin of Satan discussion as well.
I don't disagree that the serpent was instrumental, but only as it happened, not as it might have happened.
Continuing: A sense of consciousness is part of imago deo. Adam is a thinking being already, in a sense 'free' but independent 'self' are better descriptors
Let's do the same thing with "independent". It means:
- Not governed by a foreign power; self-governing.
- Free from the influence, guidance, or control of anotheror others; self-reliant.
"an independent mind."
- Not determined or influenced by someone or something else; not contingent.
because 'free will' is going to cloud this up very quickly as a good identifier for what we are seeing in Adam's original state.
And free will:
free will, in
philosophy and
science, the supposed power or capacity of humans to make decisions or perform actions independently of any prior event or state of the universe. (we could add "other entity", but secular definitions don't usually consider that).
He is a 'separate' entity, not with a switch to 'do otherwise.' That he knows he exists, is not God. This required 'relationship' for connection but also part of imago deo is the commonality (last at the Fall). Relationship (commonality) is the reciprocation between God and His creation. There is a genuine love because they are both alike (nothing to hate or 'not like').
Sometimes the ones you are most like are the ones most annoying to you. Like my son...he gets on my nerves, until I realize he acts like I do (or like I did at one time).
Continuing: If I am made with the design of 'disobedience' as an option, the problem is we are made 'to be able to disobey.'
Right.
That wasn't the goal, but rather the problem that came afterward.
Yes.
It, itself wasn't the gift. Imago deo was. An "ability to do otherwise" is problematic in that God did not make man to 'do otherwise.'
No, He didn't "make man to do otherwise". He "made man capable of doing otherwise". Do you see the difference?
Such makes God the indirect author.
I don't think this is a problem, as long as the direct author is capable of not doing otherwise (sorry for the double negative).
Such isn't needed when I grasp what the Freewill theists actually want: To describe imago deo.
I'm sure freewill theists want to describe that as much as others, but that's not the emphasis, as far as I understand. In other words, the use of free will to describe humans is an attempt to explain why they sin, when God made them good. The image of God doesn't have to come into play. They were made good, they sinned, end of story.
That is actually where they are headed, need to get. Imago deo is where relationship rests,
Do humans have the capability to have relationship with beings that are NOT in the image of man? Of course they do. "Dogs are man's best friend."
not the 'ability to choose so or choose not so.'
I think you are misunderstanding. The ability to choose so or not so is merely descriptive of the way any relationship works. Is not the goal, just a description. And any relationship that doesn't work that way is not really a relationship (in the love, category, at least).
This is Eastern philosophy and dualism (yin/yang), upon a cursory glance. It has a thing existing alongside God (God is love, not not-love). He is the only. It has to be seen logically as untenable unless there are certain logical hurdles that can be cleared or avoided. If your proposition were right, God would be able to 'not-love' any of us John 3:16 by proposition.
Are you saying God has always been required by some outside force to love us? Of course God can "not-love" us. Of course God didn't have to send His son to be the savior of sinful man. Of course Jesus didn't have to agree to die for us. But because God did...because Jesus did..., we have hope. Why would you say God cannot "not-love" us?
That is, if Love MUST be contrasted with "not love" then when He eradicates sin and death, love will no longer be possible, if the proposition were correct, upon the observation. A question: Can love exist in the future without 'not-love?' It seems the answer has to be 'yes' such that the 'not love' proposition cannot be shown to be true.
My answer is a resounding "NO"...or at least love can't exist in the future without the
ability to "not-love". But I'll agree that there won't be any exercising of "not-love" then. I don't see that the ability is the issue, rather that we will have all seen that love is the best way to relate to both God and man, and have all decided to only and always choose to love...even though we could choose otherwise.
It isn't choice that describes love. It is imago deo, rather. As I said, this is where the 'freewill' idea affects one's further theology. It is the assumption that steers other thoughts and grasp upon scripture. Granted 'freewill' defines autonomy but it is not the only thing that means autonomy. IOW, 'free' doesn't equal 'freewill.'
I don't think I ever said it did. And autonomy seems like the greater evil, since it is defined as following your own law. Freewill at least allows one to follow God's commands.
It isn't the right assumption, goes to far without the proof. The only thing required for love, is to made in the image of the One Who Loves. We do not believe God 'does not love us' because 'He can do otherwise.'
No, we don't. We believe God "does love us", and that means "He can do otherwise."
"God is faithful, for He cannot disown Himself." The verse means God doesn't have the contrast, but IS the definition in the first place.
Freewill theists are not talking about 'ability to do otherwise' but 'ability' itself. I 'can' love. Choice is rather 'how/when' I love, not 'to do otherwise.' Relationship with God is 'how' we are related and communicate. It doesn't need 'ability to do otherwise.' I've argued with you before: Adam wasn't created a robot, he was created in God's image that he had a sense of self, understood he was not God, and because of that, relationship was the foundation of how they were the same (relationship) and different not ability to do otherwise, but rather a sense of self apart from being 'not God Himself' (consciousness and a need realization of reciprocation with A[a]nother). Adam, thus, loved Eve, not because he had a 'switch to do otherwise' but because he was made both separate, and in the image of God (same and different, a good difference, not a switch to do otherwise).
Because God is no longer the author of the switch. He is the author of another entity both relational to God, in His image, but different, not to do otherwise, but to exist in relationship, apart. It solves the freewill dilemma.
Remember the consequence of the Tree? A knowledge of good and evil. Man wasn't made with that as a switch. He 'became' that at the Fall.
This fits with the "switch" I proposed earlier. A switch from "innocent" to "guilty". When you say "man wasn't made with that as a switch", you're going back to saying that Satan was the one that flipped the switch. I don't think that's true, because if it were, then Jesus, also made without that switch, who was also tempted by Satan, would have flipped as well. The power to flip a switch rested with the person, not in Satan. The difference is that Adam "flipped his own switch" (succumbed to temptation), but Jesus didn't.
The tree was the switch, or part of it. It was a good switch 'for God.' Remember the serpent "You'll become like God, (Adam and Eve already were), knowing good and evil."
Disobedience is not part of God's image. Rather acting as a 'separate being' is part of God's image. It was 'acting as a separate being' to disobey, like using a wrench as a hammer.
I'm losing your point.
God in this instance made Adam (wrench in crude analogy) never to be used as a hammer (tree in analogy). A wrench never is made to be used as a hammer in the same manner Adam was never made to 'do otherwise' (wrench as a hammer). If I'm reading freewill theists correctly, this is where I think their argument has to go.
I think you're making this more difficult than it needs to be, and it's from some presupposition you have that you can't seem to shake.
In the past, I've simply argued from my own none-freewill perspective, but this comes from entertaining the freewill paradigms. It seems this is what is really the freewill point.
Would you like to ask some of us if that's the "freewill point"? I think it's not.