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RandyPNW

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Re: Predestination
« Reply #15 on: December 07, 2021, 11:11:06 AM »
I think I have a good grasp of your view, but it's difficult to fully understand what isn't being explained -- after multiple requests for clarification.

You may have a good grasp of my view, but obviously only up to a certain point. The reason you keep asking, and not understanding, is, as you suggest, because I'm not saying everything. It is one thing to lay the framework for your belief, and another to apply it with concrete examples. Every time I try to do this I find myself having to go back to explain the original framework. I will try to pin my theory on real world examples, and maybe then you'll understand better all that I'm trying to say?

What do you mean by 'irresistible prediction'? If the 'prediction' is determinative, then is it even proper to call it a prediction, rather than a determination?

Yes, you can't fully appreciate this without applying it to a real world example. In the examples I began with, God's ultimate intention to create a world of people living in His image, I showed how this is absolutely determined, or determined in a fatalistic sense. It cannot be undone without exposing God as a liar. Since He is omnipotent, He cannot be a liar.

So when God has also determined that men should have a free will, then certain things are not "absolutely determined," but are rather, "partly determined," since people can arrange the furniture differently depending on how they design their choices. Even failure is a possible choice which cannot, nonetheless, prevent God from redeeming the situation and returning to the original plan.

In this concrete example, you can see how God determines that the end goal is reached. But understanding the free choices of men are problematic. How is it God can predict that there will be men filling His world with good people if they can choose against it?

Well, as I said, God can manage to predict what people will naturally choose for, based on their compulsions, desires, or even obsessions. God is managing our emotions, and the things we strive to do.

So you ask, why does He not manage to have everybody succeed? Or why does He determine that some will fail? Again, this is problematic, but is something only I seem to be able to explain to my own satisfaction--not to your satisfaction.

I believe God left the door open to choose for or against Him, such as He did with Satan. God did not predispose him to choose properly for Himself, but gave complete freedom of choice without persuasion or manipulation. The choice was based on choosing for righteousness or for pride.

But God did predetermine that His elect will want to choose for Him. Once God achieves His elect number of people to fill His world, those who are produced as the fruit of rebellion against God's will naturally incline to choose with Satan against following God.

They can still choose to cooperate with God on some issues, but on the matter of selling out as a follower of God they don't choose to do that. It can be predicted as such.

People have been given a predisposition to choose for the right, but also the same choice Satan was given, to have free choice. So it can be predicted that some will fulfill what God intended for earth, that a full number of "elect" will choose to do the right thing, even though in need of redemption.

It can also be predicted that like Satan some will choose against God and for independent choice. If they are not the product of God's original will for man, they must be the product of man's rebellion against God's will.

In all of this, all--both elect and the lost, will never lose their independent judgment. But once they give up the inclination to turn to the right course of action, they lose the ability to make the choice for God completely. Their choice is final.

The same with those who choose for God. Once they've chosen to follow the path deemed correct for the elect, their choice is final. And they cannot then be like Satan, choosing possibly against serving God.

I'll have to return to this later...
« Last Edit: December 07, 2021, 11:15:37 AM by RandyPNW »

RandyPNW

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Re: Predestination
« Reply #16 on: December 07, 2021, 12:10:21 PM »
What do you mean by 'irresistible prediction'? If the 'prediction' is determinative, then is it even proper to call it a prediction, rather than a determination?

Yes, a prediction can be a determination when it is a "partial determination." Some aspects are absolutely determined, while others are not absolutely determined, but are partially determined. Even so, what is absolutely determined cannot be violated by what is partially determined. I hate speaking in generalities!

I explain that in another thread. God creates a tendency which, if all distractions are removed, reliably produce a predictable result. They are inevitable.

You haven't explained. What I've asked for is an explanation of why you think this is the case? People don't exist in the world with 'all distractions removed', and just because someone has a predisposition or proclivity towards some thing doesn't mean that they will inevitably, always, predictably, choose or do that thing.

While I say "yes," you say "no." And perhaps we can't get past this? Again, I disagree--I believe what God predisposes He foreknows, as well as predetermines. He pursues an objective through the use of free will. Yes, it is "manipulated" free will, if we use your words. I've already conceded this.

God did differently with Man than He did with Satan. He predetermined a good outcome for Man, even with initial failure. On the same token, those who He did not originally predetermine are left with an inclination in the opposite direction, not by God's wish, but only as a consequence of human liberty running in the wrong direction, and against God's word.

What existential evidence is there for this? And, it's still the case that you're dealing with a God who doesn't know but predicts (apparently, irresistibly?). I see no justification for reducing the complexity of the reality of people to putting someone in a room with two computers and asking them to choose between them. If only that was the choice Sophie had to make.

This is where it goes far beyond my "pay grade!" I don't think Satan's original choice was an "equal choice," whatever that means. We think in terms of computer programs. Can anything be truly "random?" Can any choice be pure and un-manipulated? I don't think so. The programmer has to determine a tendency in one direction or another.

God's original plan produced a tendency in Man to choose for obeying His word. And thus, the outcome is predictable. God will have the elect choosing for Him.

And the inclination for those not so created as part of God's original elect also then incline against God's word by default. They do not lose their free will, but they incline against God's word, and so it can reliably be predictted that they will be lost.

Double Predestination? Perhaps. I just don't like describing it that way, because it tends to depreciate how much the Lost can succeed in doing God's will and thus mitigate their punishment for not following God's word all the way. It also tends to depreciate the freedom of the elect in rebelling against God until they ultimately capitulate to His word.

So why hasn't God created everyone this way?

God chose to give people freedom, including freedom to rebel against His word. This did not stop God from having His world full of people, but it did succeed in allowing free human will to run wild, resulting in the birth of many babies God never planned for. And thus, by nature, they incline against complete servitude to God.

Pavlov trained his dogs cruelly. Is he really the best comparison?

I had some training in behavior modification. It is a good example for those being so trained. I'm also very aware that if I in the slightest insult your reason I will not likely have you agree with me on anything, except with an insult added. ;)

God doesn't have that problem. He doesn't change with time *in His own words.* And so the things that change with time cannot change who He is.

What? I suggested that you're confusing epistemology for existentialism in positing that foreknowledge is an explanation for why 'anything... may happen'.

As I said, God's foreknowledge comes from the intentions of an omnipotent Being. What He determines *must* happen, and thus, is predetermined.

But the scope of what is predetermined is also the product of how God scales what must happen in the light of decisions free moral agents make--agents that He made to be as such.

So what does God "foreknow" about the outcome of choices free moral agents make? He knows His own absolutely determined goals for the universe and for earth and for people. But He does not know which choices they make--only what particular collage will result from any particular set of choices. It will still end up where God wanted it to go.

He didn't know whether human history will end up at a perfect square, or a different kind of rectangle--perhaps even as a parallelogram or some other such geometric figure with different adjustments and degrees of perfection or imperfection. But they will all end up as a geometric figure, since any choice that is made will be reconciled with God's ultimate objective.

And since He is the First Cause of all that is created, what He knows is what must be. Free moral agents cannot change that, though they are given a circle of influence in which they may make free choices.

You're not replying to what I said.

Maybe you're addressing what seems to be a problem for you, but one that isn't a problem for me?

God gives men those choices, though they cannot conflict with what He knows about Himself and what He has determined to be beyond that. I see no conflict between God's foreknowledge and limited determinism. God simply limits His foreknowledge to a range of human choices all subordinate to His higher determinations.

What are you talking about? Why couldn't humanity make choices that "conflict with what God knows about Himself"? What do these two things have to do with each other?

I explain that above. I doubt it's going to be to your satisfaction.
« Last Edit: December 07, 2021, 12:14:23 PM by RandyPNW »

RabbiKnife

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Re: Predestination
« Reply #17 on: December 07, 2021, 12:28:43 PM »
The Matrix strong in this one is.

And Tron.

Don't forget Tron.  The original, not the 2nd one.
Danger, Will Robinson.  You will be assimilated, confiscated, folded, mutilated, and spindled. Do not pass go.  Turn right on red. Third star to the right and full speed 'til morning.

Athanasius

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Re: Predestination
« Reply #18 on: December 07, 2021, 02:18:31 PM »
You may have a good grasp of my view, but obviously only up to a certain point. The reason you keep asking, and not understanding, is, as you suggest, because I'm not saying everything. It is one thing to lay the framework for your belief, and another to apply it with concrete examples. Every time I try to do this I find myself having to go back to explain the original framework. I will try to pin my theory on real world examples, and maybe then you'll understand better all that I'm trying to say?

Good examples are always helpful.

Yes, you can't fully appreciate this without applying it to a real world example. In the examples I began with, God's ultimate intention to create a world of people living in His image, I showed how this is absolutely determined, or determined in a fatalistic sense. It cannot be undone without exposing God as a liar. Since He is omnipotent, He cannot be a liar.

You did attempt to show this, but two things:

- God's own self-determinations aren't properly described as fatalistic.
- I suspect God's omnibenevolence rather than His omnipotence has more to do with lying.

So when God has also determined that men should have a free will, then certain things are not "absolutely determined," but are rather, "partly determined," since people can arrange the furniture differently depending on how they design their choices. Even failure is a possible choice which cannot, nonetheless, prevent God from redeeming the situation and returning to the original plan.

Yes, this much is clear. What you also seem to be saying is that a person cannot choose to do the dishes when faced with a choice to arrange the furniture. A person is free to choose between the options God has set before them, but they aren't free to choose a different option entirely. How this works in practice is unclear.

In this concrete example, you can see how God determines that the end goal is reached. But understanding the free choices of men are problematic. How is it God can predict that there will be men filling His world with good people if they can choose against it?

You seem to be saying that God's end goal is to arrange the furniture, so He creates creatures tasked with arranging the furniture, and so at least some of them must arrange the furniture.

Well, as I said, God can manage to predict what people will naturally choose for, based on their compulsions, desires, or even obsessions. God is managing our emotions, and the things we strive to do.

You're saying two different things: (1) God is a magnificent predictor and (2) God manages our emotions and the things we strive to do. What do you mean by (2)? And, if you mean by (2) what you seem to be saying by (2), then is God predicting, as (1) suggests, or is God micromanaging? Life is not actually full of choices, but the illusions of choice. It's not open world, but a corridor along which we're led, and all the while we think we're freer than we are. This raises interesting questions about what it means for God to lie.

So you ask, why does He not manage to have everybody succeed? Or why does He determine that some will fail? Again, this is problematic, but is something only I seem to be able to explain to my own satisfaction--not to your satisfaction.

I believe God left the door open to choose for or against Him, such as He did with Satan. God did not predispose him to choose properly for Himself, but gave complete freedom of choice without persuasion or manipulation. The choice was based on choosing for righteousness or for pride.

But God did predetermine that His elect will want to choose for Him. Once God achieves His elect number of people to fill His world, those who are produced as the fruit of rebellion against God's will naturally incline to choose with Satan against following God.

They can still choose to cooperate with God on some issues, but on the matter of selling out as a follower of God they don't choose to do that. It can be predicted as such.

People have been given a predisposition to choose for the right, but also the same choice Satan was given, to have free choice. So it can be predicted that some will fulfill what God intended for earth, that a full number of "elect" will choose to do the right thing, even though in need of redemption.

It can also be predicted that like Satan some will choose against God and for independent choice. If they are not the product of God's original will for man, they must be the product of man's rebellion against God's will.

I'm not asking why God didn't manage to have everyone succeed. I'm asking why God didn't create everyone with the irresistible disposition to do what was right, to choose faith, to do good, etc.

You hold in tension two ideas: (1) that people were created with the absolute freedom to choose God or rebel and (2) that God predetermined His elect will choose for Him. 'Elect' would suggest that the choice isn't absolutely free, and it comes back to my question: if God elects some to salvation, then why not elect all to salvation? Or, do you mean by elect not X number of people (as you suggested previously), but something along the lines of "whoever believes is elect, and it's possible for all to believe, and thus for all to be elect". (This goes back to my question.)

In all of this, all--both elect and the lost, will never lose their independent judgment. But once they give up the inclination to turn to the right course of action, they lose the ability to make the choice for God completely. Their choice is final.

The same with those who choose for God. Once they've chosen to follow the path deemed correct for the elect, their choice is final. And they cannot then be like Satan, choosing possibly against serving God.

You can't have it both ways. Either the choice is lost completely, or independent judgment is preserved. But more importantly, do we see this reflected in Scripture?
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Athanasius

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Re: Predestination
« Reply #19 on: December 07, 2021, 02:42:18 PM »
Yes, a prediction can be a determination when it is a "partial determination." Some aspects are absolutely determined, while others are not absolutely determined, but are partially determined. Even so, what is absolutely determined cannot be violated by what is partially determined. I hate speaking in generalities!

If you mean determination then you should say 'determination'. No one understands "prediction" to mean "partial determination".

While I say "yes," you say "no." And perhaps we can't get past this? Again, I disagree--I believe what God predisposes He foreknows, as well as predetermines. He pursues an objective through the use of free will. Yes, it is "manipulated" free will, if we use your words. I've already conceded this.

It's because your words aren't precise. Foreknowledge is about knowledge, not predisposition or predetermination. Predetermination is related to foreordination, which is not foreknowledge.

God did differently with Man than He did with Satan. He predetermined a good outcome for Man, even with initial failure. On the same token, those who He did not originally predetermine are left with an inclination in the opposite direction, not by God's wish, but only as a consequence of human liberty running in the wrong direction, and against God's word.

What you seem to be saying is that God predetermined a 'good outcome' for some of humanity. The segment of humanity He didn't predetermine a 'good outcome' for are those that you say are inclined to reject God. Apparently not by God's wish, despite God not predetermining a 'good outcome' for them, so clearly God has made a choice. Presumably, all humanity would reject God if not for God's predetermination regarding some of humanity (those lucky few). This description of God's salvific activity seems to entail an inexcusable moral failure.

That's what you're saying, but I'm not sure that's what you mean to say.

This is where it goes far beyond my "pay grade!" I don't think Satan's original choice was an "equal choice," whatever that means. We think in terms of computer programs. Can anything be truly "random?" Can any choice be pure and un-manipulated? I don't think so. The programmer has to determine a tendency in one direction or another.

Shouldn't you have some idea about what that means, given you've introduced the phrase? You would have to say, though, that God determined for Satan to rebel, and Satan had no choice in the matter. This is the same God who could have determined otherwise and saved at least a few billion people a lot of pain and suffering. But you're saying He didn't for dramatic effect?

God's original plan produced a tendency in Man to choose for obeying His word. And thus, the outcome is predictable. God will have the elect choosing for Him.

And the inclination for those not so created as part of God's original elect also then incline against God's word by default. They do not lose their free will, but they incline against God's word, and so it can reliably be predictted that they will be lost.

Double Predestination? Perhaps. I just don't like describing it that way, because it tends to depreciate how much the Lost can succeed in doing God's will and thus mitigate their punishment for not following God's word all the way. It also tends to depreciate the freedom of the elect in rebelling against God until they ultimately capitulate to His word.

You may not like the words 'double predestination' but that's what you're describing. There's nothing glorious in the elect "rebelling against God until they ultimately capitulate". There's something of the deepest regret in resigning everyone else to damnation. The scenario you've outlined is an illusion. It's the appearance of choice, and freedom, in the light of God's determinations. You're describing cruelty worse than any cruelty ever known.

God chose to give people freedom, including freedom to rebel against His word. This did not stop God from having His world full of people, but it did succeed in allowing free human will to run wild, resulting in the birth of many babies God never planned for. And thus, by nature, they incline against complete servitude to God.

So this is an image of God the neglectful parent? The God who will leave the 99 sheep to save the 1 wasn't bothered to save the babies he "never planned for"? That's horrific. I'd expect that from Lovecraft, not Moses.

I had some training in behavior modification. It is a good example for those being so trained. I'm also very aware that if I in the slightest insult your reason I will not likely have you agree with me on anything, except with an insult added. ;)

Trained being the operative word.

You haven't insulted me, and I'm happy to agree on the points we agree on. The view of God that springs from the descriptions above is on the level of eldritch horror.

As I said, God's foreknowledge comes from the intentions of an omnipotent Being. What He determines *must* happen, and thus, is predetermined.

No, it really doesn't. You're confusing foreknowledge, foreordination, determination and predetermination.

But the scope of what is predetermined is also the product of how God scales what must happen in the light of decisions free moral agents make--agents that He made to be as such.

So what does God "foreknow" about the outcome of choices free moral agents make? He knows His own absolutely determined goals for the universe and for earth and for people. But He does not know which choices they make--only what particular collage will result from any particular set of choices. It will still end up where God wanted it to go.

But which is it? Does God 'foreknow' because He's determined the context and set of choices, or does He not foreknow despite you're earlier affirmations that He's not surprised by any outcome because He knows all outcomes? This is the inconsistency I was complaining about. You affirm for yourself what you deny for others.

He didn't know whether human history will end up at a perfect square, or a different kind of rectangle--perhaps even as a parallelogram or some other such geometric figure with different adjustments and degrees of perfection or imperfection. But they will all end up as a geometric figure, since any choice that is made will be reconciled with God's ultimate objective.

But how could He not know if He had a plan in the fatalistic sense from the start, to use your words? Geometry, of all things...

Maybe you're addressing what seems to be a problem for you, but one that isn't a problem for me?

I said that you were confusing epistemology and existentialism. You then wrote a reply about God not changing over time. What do these two things have to do with each other?

I explain that above. I doubt it's going to be to your satisfaction.

You explained why humanity can't make choices that thwart God's plan. You haven't explained why humanity can't make choices that conflict with what God knows about Himself.
Life is not a problem to be solved, but a reality to be experienced.

RandyPNW

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Re: Predestination
« Reply #20 on: December 07, 2021, 03:32:37 PM »
If you mean determination then you should say 'determination'. No one understands "prediction" to mean "partial determination".

Just answering the questions, brother. If I used "prediction," then that's what I meant. And in a particular context, yes I would understand "prediction" to mean "partial determination."

For example, when God predicts the outcome of the earth to consist of the full number of God's elect, then it is being "partially determined," in my view. It is determined to result as such in the end.

But people also utilize their own free choices to get there by the particular paths they choose to go on. The end is predicted, but not the particular means that is left up to human choice.

It's because your words aren't precise. Foreknowledge is about knowledge, not predisposition or predetermination. Predetermination is related to foreordination, which is not foreknowledge.

Brother, I meant what I said. To me, God's foreknowledge is equal to what He anticipates will happen, as well as what he absolutely determines must happen.

This is a flexible application of "foreknowledge," to include some discretion for human freedom of choice. It is not an "absolute" foreknowledge, although I have to say that God predetermines all of man's possible choices, as well. Nothing novel can be introduced into God's universe that God has not already prepared contingencies for.

God is big enough to allow free will in His universe. But He is too omniscient not to know what will happen, and too omnipotent to allow His promises to go on unfulfilled.

What you seem to be saying is that God predetermined a 'good outcome' for some of humanity. The segment of humanity He didn't predetermine a 'good outcome' for are those that you say are inclined to reject God. Apparently not by God's wish, despite God not predetermining a 'good outcome' for them, so clearly God has made a choice. Presumably, all humanity would reject God if not for God's predetermination regarding some of humanity (those lucky few). This description of God's salvific activity seems to entail an inexcusable moral failure.

That's not my assessment. God laid down the ground rules, and allowed for consequences that lay beyond His original will. Choosing a set number of elect was His original will. Giving Man the capacity with a compromised spiritual life results from Man's bypassing God's word--it was not God's "moral failure."

You would have to say, though, that God determined for Satan to rebel, and Satan had no choice in the matter. This is the same God who could have determined otherwise and saved at least a few billion people a lot of pain and suffering. But you're saying He didn't for dramatic effect?

I'm saying God originated the drama, and Man made it into a tragedy. Giving Satan a choice to follow God or to follow himself, competing with God, was God's idea, yes. But it wasn't, I think, a bad one. We instinctively know it is wrong to manipulate someone to do right and to then give the manipulated person credit for making the right decision.

So God's giving Satan an equal, unmanipulated choice, is different from the creation of Man, who received a determined mission. We were given freedom, but we were also given an inclination. Some must become God's elect.

Man can lose their normal inclination by allowing themselves to be manipulated by Satan. In this case, the children of Man sometimes incline to the right, and others incline to the left.

So Man had the ability to choose to allow himself to go against his normal inclinations. And those who are children of that rebellion naturally incline against following their good inclinations.

God has a way, though, of dealing with all people equitably. Even if people do not want to serve God completely, they can serve Him partially. This will mitigate their sentencing.

All those who get into Heaven will have yielded up all of their old life of sin. And all of those who choose against completely yielding up to God, and so miss Heaven, still have the choice to follow God in part.

Nobody wants to have all their works burned up, including their life in paradise. But we don't know what's beyond the veil in the world of those who choose to only partly serve God. I suspect there will be greater and lesser punishments?

But how could He not know if He had a plan in the fatalistic sense from the start, to use your words? Geometry, of all things...

Yes, I can't think of a better example. No matter how you enclose a space, it's going to be a geometric figure if you use lines. It can be perfect, as in a square. Or it could be partly off, and yet still succeed in being somewhat geometric and enclose a space intended by the artist. Or, it can be a mess of irregular lines, but still being attached to each other, the result is still a geometric figure, enclosing a space, intended by the artist.

Believe it or not, God used squares and rectangles in designing His Tabernacle. It's an interesting study. But I won't indulge in it here and now.

Free will allows for all of the equivalent geometric figures, and still remains true to the artist's predetermined wish to enclose a space using lines. God's goal is to have a world filled with people in His image. When they make imperfect choices, the lines become irregular, but still serve their function. A square may become a double square, or rectangle, and take twice as long to get there. But it still accomplishes its originally-intended goal.

I said that you were confusing epistemology and existentialism. You then wrote a reply about God not changing over time. What do these two things have to do with each other?

I've told you repeatedly that God's foreknowledge is absolute with respect to things He absolutely predetermines must take place. He also foreknows--that is epistemology, that some things allow for changes in the structure, still leading to his absolutely predetermined goal.

There is some freedom here to do a variety of good or bad things, and there is also the freedom to rebel against living under the bondage of God's word. But all of these choices still result in God's end game being fulfilled, to fill the world with good people.

There is no time for God between fashioning His original goal and accomplishing that goal. He ends where He began, only with the finished product He originally envisioned.

He didn't require any media to get there, but determined to use elements in time to get there. And so, time figures into God's foreknowledge and predestination.

You explained why humanity can't make choices that thwart God's plan. You haven't explained why humanity can't make choices that conflict with what God knows about Himself.

Perhaps I wasn't clear enough. What God knows about Himself is His sinless purity. He cannot act out of character with Himself.

So whatever Man chooses to do, to cooperate with God's blueprint of goodness or rebel against it, Man will never be able to spoil God's image of Himself. If they sin, it will be shown as such. If they rebel, it will be shown as such. But God will still arrive at a world filled with good people.

And those who rebel against that will be removed as by fire. It will obviously be a different kind of "fire" that removes rebels from the future world. But to arrive at God's ideal world, His word must, to be true to Himself, remove the ungodly.

RabbiKnife

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Re: Predestination
« Reply #21 on: December 07, 2021, 04:11:05 PM »
We keep going around this mountain again and again.

I think the problem is that, as Athanasius and I understand your view, you have a situation in which "Partial Determinism" -- which is a free will construct, is also deemed to be consistent with "full determination" of some things, which is a fatalistic construct.

So you have "A = A(sometimes), but A does not always necessarily = A(other times)"), which unfortunately, just won't work.  It creates a logical fallacy.

And you can't blame that on "God is not restricted by time and space" because the arena in which this is alleged to occur is within our time and space.

We agree that free will and God's sovereignty and foreknowledge are absolutely compatible, but disagree with the construct by which you are attempting to state that.

I really think it is an definitional consistency issue.

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RandyPNW

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Re: Predestination
« Reply #22 on: December 07, 2021, 09:17:15 PM »
We keep going around this mountain again and again.

I think the problem is that, as Athanasius and I understand your view, you have a situation in which "Partial Determinism" -- which is a free will construct, is also deemed to be consistent with "full determination" of some things, which is a fatalistic construct.

I don't agree. That's like saying A cannot = B, even though it's also true that B = A. Just because things are Determined does not mean they cannot be Partly Determined and Partly Not.

And this is true particularly because the part that is not Determined is still being Partly Determined. A x 0 = B x 0 . Therefore, both A and B = 0, where the value of Infinity = 0 and the value of A and B are both forms of Determinism.

And you can't blame that on "God is not restricted by time and space" because the arena in which this is alleged to occur is within our time and space.

No, I'm saying the Mind of God, which is infinite, can command both absolute determined goals and partly determined goals without contradiction, since in his infinite Mind He controls even the element of free human will. It all ends up at God's determined end, even with human free will.

We agree that free will and God's sovereignty and foreknowledge are absolutely compatible, but disagree with the construct by which you are attempting to state that.

I really think it is an definitional consistency issue.

At least we agree on the real existence of free will. Thanks for that! :)
« Last Edit: December 07, 2021, 09:18:53 PM by RandyPNW »

RabbiKnife

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Re: Predestination
« Reply #23 on: December 08, 2021, 06:16:31 AM »
But you don't by definition agree on the reality of free will as you define free will to mean "all those potential choices that are not already fully or partially predetermined."
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RandyPNW

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Re: Predestination
« Reply #24 on: December 08, 2021, 12:07:39 PM »
But you don't by definition agree on the reality of free will as you define free will to mean "all those potential choices that are not already fully or partially predetermined."

Right, we likely aren't agreeing on everything. Free Will is something that God both anticipates, manipulates, and thus controls. It would be like creating a bee to like honey, and then expecting, guiding, and ensuring that bees choose to produce honey.

Those bees are choosing to make honey, but God foreknows and predetermines that this will take place. In the same way, God made people to choose to live in the image of God.

But God gave them the capacity to allow deception into their lives so that what they would normally choose for can be temporarily disrupted by deception and duress. God predestinated Man to ultimately prevail in living for God.

But in allowing that deception, children are born who gravitate towards maintaining their choice to live in rebellion. Children would nevertheless be predestinated to complete God's end goal of filling the world with people who succeed in following Him.

 

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