Ask Mr. Religion
☞☞☞☞Presbyterian (PCA) 	
Gold Subscriber
LIFETIME MEMBER
Hall of Fame
Men make decisions according to their own inclinations, yet standing behind each choice made, even rebellious choices, is the decree of God (see Genesis 20:6; Gen. 45:8; Gen. 50:20; Ex. 4:21; 8:15; 9:12; 9:34-10:2, 20, 27; 11:10; 14:8; Ex. 9:16; 1 Kings 10:9; 14:7; Isa. 45:13; Deut. 2:30; Deut. 29:4; Joshua 11:19-20; 1 Sam. 1:5; 1 Sam. 25:39; Ruth 4:13; Isa. 10:5 and forward; Isa. 45:7; Isa. 46:11 [and here]; Isa. 63:17; Ezek. 36:26-27; Judges 11:32; Judges 14:4; Ps. 105:24-25; Ps. 139:16; Prov. 16:1, 4, 9; Prov. 21:1; Ezra 1:1; Luke 22:22; John 3:21; John 12:39-40; John 19:11; Acts 4:27-28; Acts 17:26; Isa. 53:10; Rom. 9:16, 18; Rom. 11:7-8; Rom. 11:25; Php. 2:12-13; 2 Thess 2:11-13; Heb. 13:21; 2 Pet. 2:12; Rev. 17:17).
I believe Scripture clearly teaches that for the sake of the good that God causes to arise from the sinfulness of the actions of men, God decrees said actions. Man, on the other hand, decrees said actions for the sake of the evil that is in them. Despite hating sin as it is in itself, considering all consequences, it may be the will of God that it come to pass. While it may be God's pleasure to order such things, here sin is not willed by God as sin or for the sake of evil, but for the sake of the consequence of the greater good that will come from God's ordering. Now some may now say that God's willing to order things such that evil comes to pass for the sake of the contrary good implies God does not hate evil as evil. Moreover, if this is true, then there is no reason for God to forbid evil as evil, and even punish evil as such.
This does not mean we are at liberty charge God with playing by the morally questionable principle that "the end justifies the means". We need to remember that God has sovereign rights as the Creator that we, the created, do not have. God has rights the creation cannot lay claim to, and within those rights lie God's right to manipulate and use the evil of sin to accomplish His good purposes (Deut. 32:39; Rom. 9:19-21). Thus, as the Scriptures cited above teaches us, God wills righteously what men do wickedly.
Having said this, I am in no position to explain "how" God pulls off the compatibility between being sovereign over all that happens and yet holding man responsible. In fact, I doubt I will ever know this even on the other side of the grave. What I do know is that Scripture clearly teaches nothing happens outside the express will of God and that I have no epistemological nor theological warrant to elevate man over God, as do the Arminians, the Catholics, or the open-theists. What I also know is that for God to pull off what He does as we find from Scripture, the claim by some, especially open theists, that God does not "micro-manage", is without any foundation, for if God's providential control does not extend to the minute actions of men, then God would in fact be incapable of controlling the "big items" credited to Him in Scripture. Indeed, if God providentially controls history, there is the implicit requirement that God has an overriding influence on the many decisions men make every day.
AMR
I believe Scripture clearly teaches that for the sake of the good that God causes to arise from the sinfulness of the actions of men, God decrees said actions. Man, on the other hand, decrees said actions for the sake of the evil that is in them. Despite hating sin as it is in itself, considering all consequences, it may be the will of God that it come to pass. While it may be God's pleasure to order such things, here sin is not willed by God as sin or for the sake of evil, but for the sake of the consequence of the greater good that will come from God's ordering. Now some may now say that God's willing to order things such that evil comes to pass for the sake of the contrary good implies God does not hate evil as evil. Moreover, if this is true, then there is no reason for God to forbid evil as evil, and even punish evil as such.
This does not mean we are at liberty charge God with playing by the morally questionable principle that "the end justifies the means". We need to remember that God has sovereign rights as the Creator that we, the created, do not have. God has rights the creation cannot lay claim to, and within those rights lie God's right to manipulate and use the evil of sin to accomplish His good purposes (Deut. 32:39; Rom. 9:19-21). Thus, as the Scriptures cited above teaches us, God wills righteously what men do wickedly.
Having said this, I am in no position to explain "how" God pulls off the compatibility between being sovereign over all that happens and yet holding man responsible. In fact, I doubt I will ever know this even on the other side of the grave. What I do know is that Scripture clearly teaches nothing happens outside the express will of God and that I have no epistemological nor theological warrant to elevate man over God, as do the Arminians, the Catholics, or the open-theists. What I also know is that for God to pull off what He does as we find from Scripture, the claim by some, especially open theists, that God does not "micro-manage", is without any foundation, for if God's providential control does not extend to the minute actions of men, then God would in fact be incapable of controlling the "big items" credited to Him in Scripture. Indeed, if God providentially controls history, there is the implicit requirement that God has an overriding influence on the many decisions men make every day.
AMR
Last edited: