yes.You mean that a man's will has a trajectory of it's own, that God can intervene?
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yes.You mean that a man's will has a trajectory of it's own, that God can intervene?
The problem is that God did know Adam would sin, because we know the Cross happened before creation. Adam did not sin before creation. Satan did not rebel before creation. However the Cross did, because it was God on the Cross before creation.If the Creator of mankind had indeed exercised his power to foreknow all that history that has seen since man’s creation, then the full weight of all the wickedness thereafter resulting was deliberately set in motion by God when he spoke the words: “Let us make man.” (Ge 1:26) These facts bring into question the reasonableness and consistency of your concept of Jehovah God being all-knowing, particularly so, since the disciple James shows that disorder and other vile things do not originate from God’s heavenly presence but are “earthly, animal, demonic” in source.—Jas 3:14-18.
So I disagree with you God didn't have to have seen Adam was going to sin before he created him for Jehovah God to be all-knowing. Jehovah God can selectively choose not to look into the future to see if Adam was going to sin or not and still be all-knowing.
The problem is that God did know Adam would sin, because we know the Cross happened before creation. Adam did not sin before creation. Satan did not rebel before creation. However the Cross did, because it was God on the Cross before creation.
Adam had free will. God never forced Adam to disobey. That is my point. Satan does not have free will. Satan is not even relevant. God allowed Satan to rebel. It did not matter if God knew or did not know what God would do. Seems kind of pointless to prepare for something just in theory without knowing all things. Seems pointless to say God did not know what God would do. To extend that to God did not know what Adam would do is only making God look limited and was only a scientist with a theory that had multiple outcomes. God being the author of sin is unavoidable. This is all of God's creation and no one snuck in and altered His creation while He was not looking. The point is God left sin up to free will and Adam's free will choice, even knowing the outcome, and God already had a solution.because as you said, they had no freewill before being created, to make any kind of choices of their own, and after they were created they would only be able to make the choices that God decided for them before they were created. In other words they would be able only to make the choice to be disobedient, if they had the ability to be obedient they would have been able to prove the True God wrong concerning what the True God saw before creating anything.
Adam had free will. God never forced Adam to disobey. That is my point. Satan does not have free will. Satan is not even relevant. God allowed Satan to rebel. It did not matter if God knew or did not know what God would do. Seems kind of pointless to prepare for something just in theory without knowing all things. Seems pointless to say God did not know what God would do. To extend that to God did not know what Adam would do is only making God look limited and was only a scientist with a theory that had multiple outcomes. God being the author of sin is unavoidable. This is all of God's creation and no one snuck in and altered His creation while He was not looking. The point is God left sin up to free will and Adam's free will choice, even knowing the outcome, and God already had a solution.
We cannot put limits on God to make Him look better. The limits look even worse.
Those who dwell on the point God allowed sin to happen add to the desire of those who want to reject God’s solution. God does not force us to accept Him even if we know God allowed evil to happen. Looking at God that way, is what Satan does, and totally rejecting God and the reality of the Atonement is what Satan wants.
Adam did not sin. Adam ate. Sin was the result, not the action.My point is, that Adams free will can't prove God wrong because, God is infallible. So if God looked into the future before creating Adam and saw him sin as you're saying, it was in Gods mind that Adam sinned, not that Adam had sinned, since Adam didn't exist yet, so Adam couldn't make a choice to sin since he didn't exist yet. Then after God created Adam, it was impossible for Adam to make any choice but to be disobedient since that's what God saw in his mind before creating Adam, meaning Adam never had the ability to be obedient because if he did then Adam, had the ability to prove God wrong and that's impossible. So I disagree that God looked into the future to see if Adam would sin. That would mean God chose Adams path for him and God doesn't choose a path of disobedience for anyone.
yes [man's will has a trajectory of its own].
No, of course not, absolutely nothing in His universe is outside his control. Neither can He create a rock so massive, that He cannot lift or control it it. But, rather, He chooses not to intervene in our free-will, despite the fact that He can.
An element, yes. And, you are correct, no matter how one slices it, there is invariably, an essence of domination on God's part. But, due to His omnipotence, He is also able to create a being that has a certain amount of autonomy.
No, of course not, absolutely nothing in His universe is outside his control. Neither can He create a rock so massive, that He cannot lift or control it it.
Authentic love must be free. We cannot fulfill God's ultimate command to love Him with all our hearts and lives, if such a disposition is coerced or manipulated, or not stemming from a full conviction.
Where's it say God controls everything?If nothing is outside of His control, then nothing has a trajectory of its own.
He cannot both control and ignore our will at the same time, contrary to what you suggest when you say He chooses not to intervene in that which He controls.
That's absurd. God gives his creation dominion. You can not have it both ways. Either we really do and will rule over the Earth or we don't. You would make God a slave to his own power.Likewise, He is unable to create a being that has a certain amount of autonomy, because it is unintelligible. An inferior being which requires God to not be all power cannot exist, because He does have omnipotence - all power.
Yet Esau's likely in heaven. So God didn't hate him, he hated his actions and attitude, and therefore did not bless Esau initially.Authentic love must be free... interesting phrase. Free from what? Do you mean free from God's control? That authentic love must not be caused by Love?
Romans 9:13
As it is written, Jacob have I loved, but Esau have I hated.
1 John 4:19
We love him, because he first loved us.
A logical conclusion to Determinism is that God is the One who causes authentic love.
Where's it say God controls everything?
God didn't hate him
So you are to literally hate your brothers and sisters and wife?"Esau have I hated." (Romans 9)
"Esau have I hated." (Romans 9)
So you are to literally hate your brothers and sisters and wife?
If any man come to Me and hate not his father and mother, and wife and children, and brethren and sisters, yea, and his own life also, he cannot be My disciple. Luke 14:26
As for husbands, love your wives just like Christ loved the church and gave himself for her.” — Ephesians 5:25
So it seems if you are correct we have a direct contradiction in scripture...
That's absurd. God gives his creation dominion. You can not have it both ways. Either we really do and will rule over the Earth or we don't. You would make God a slave to his own power.
Wow, so absolutely no answers to my questions..no looking at the context, just dismiss it without looking into what it means in Romans.God said He hated Esau, therefore Renniks concluded that if I'm correct, then there is a contradiction in Scripture. (???)
If I am correct, you just made some sort of cheap strawman argument.
As for your question on the whereabouts of 'Scripture saying God controls everything', I propose that we don't have the right as Christians to challenge that. Since Scripture teaches that God controlled everything in creation in the beginning, God controlling everything should be regarded as the default position of the Bible.
Genesis 1:1
In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth.
So, Renniks, where does Scripture say God isn't controlling?
Well, you certainly haven't gotten any less predictable.A man can have dominion over the earth. But it is not without God over him.
Proverbs 16:1
The preparations of the heart in man, and the answer of the tongue, is from the Lord.
Proverbs 16:9
A man's heart deviseth his way: but the Lord directeth his steps.