Montana said:
Lamerson is right in pointing out that Jesus is God. But he shoots himself in the foot by arguing that Jesus must have known everything.
That’s a good catch, but don’t you doubt that will come back to haunt him. I mean that it would seem a waste of time to point out every single problem with Dr. Lamerson’s arguments. And really the actual questions he proposed are not so difficult as to be answered easily and readily.
I was very curious to see what sort of argument the Predestination position would give. It’s only in the past few years that I have begun to lean more to the “Free Will” side, and I still hold close ties to the Predestination camp…. It is much like an old home to me.
(
Edited - I should point out that the Free Will camp is really an old home as well. It is little more than the belief we all had in God whenever we were children in Sunday School. Free Will seems to be the natural conception, right or not, that one takes away from the Sunday school lessons about Moses, Abraham, David, and the various stories from the Old Testament. Perhaps this is why Dr. Lamerson wisely hopes to avoid these common stories.)
godrulz said:
Mt. 6:8 is not a common proof text for either position. Sam anticipates objections, but the most we can conclude is that God has perfect past and present knowledge.
I agree that it really supports neither position unless one is trying to read their own position into the text. To me, it can mean even something very general. God, in a general way, knows what all mankind needs even before they pray. Even considering a fabricated person of literature (who has no needs due to not being real) God knows what he would need if he were to become real, even before he asked. I’m not sure the passage has the threat towards the Free-Willist camp that Dr. Lamerson believes it has.
Actually the context of the passage if you read the preceding verse, is just that God doesn’t need to be told over and over again as if he forgets … that’s certainly not going to tear down the “Free-Will” position.
Without having met him, I like Dr. Lamerson. I like his honesty thus far. However, having heard just a small amount of Enyart’s arguments in the past, and considering that most debaters put either their best or second best argument first, I think the better debating may well happen in the grandstands.
The Berean said:
Dr. Lamerson should focus on the Sciptures. I got a bit lost with "Boyd said this..." and "Sander's said that..." quotes. I have not read any writings by Boyd or Sanders so felt I was missing something.
I think that’s probably just the problem of going first. Until Enyart is able to lay out his beliefs, Dr. Lamerson is having to use the beliefs of others that may or may not position themselves exactly like Enyart. I don’t think he meant any particular strawman attack by it.
TheBerean said:
I liked the Peter example. I find it highy unlikely that Jesus "guessed" that Peter would deny him simply because Jesus knew Peter well.
I find it to be the single best argument that I could make when I was in the Predestination camp. I still think it is a good one, I just don’t think it can stand to the weight of evidence the Bible gives for the Free Will camp.
Many have answered this as Dr. Lamerson points out. Of those, he argues that Sander’s explanation (which I would find to be the most credible) presents the same problem with God because the three people might choose not to tempt Peter. Actually Sanders proposes that Jesus has said that Satan has asked permission to tempt Peter (Luke 22:31), perhaps God agreed to three temptations and Jesus knew Peter was not ready for Satan’s onslaught, even as God knew Job could withstand it.
Dr. Lamerson argues that the three tempters had free will and could have chosen not to tempt, but that’s a very weak point in my own opinion. After all, if one man refused to tempt Peter, Satan could move on to the next man. It is
more unlikely, I believe, to suggest Satan couldn’t find even three people to use out of the entire crowds that were up. And I ‘m not sure that anyone argues that roosters have free will on when to crow.