DonW
New member
Yorzhik, I didn't say "He doesn't expect" I said "He doesn't intend." There is a great difference.
The analogy is not reversible, because I know nothing from foreknowledge. I only know principles and processes which dictate an inevitable outcome. Yet I choose to partake in life that will inevitably result in death for me and everyone I bring into this world, yet it is not my decisions that cause those deaths directly.
Your analogy fails because you assume God created for immediate gratification, that only a good result now will satisfy God. God could indeed have foreknown that Adam would fall on his second day of existence and chosen to create because of the ultimate benefit that some would choose the way of salvation.
Your analogy of the vineyard fails for the same reason, and because the metaphor of the vineyard is not complete. Wherever the similitude fails your analogy must also fail. A grape vine does not have free will. It is an organism that responds mechanically to stimuli and resource availability.
Every Hebrew had a choice whether to worship regardless of how good Yahweh has been. That free will means that however rightfully God is due worship, they are not compelled to worship Him and may choose to worship the baals instead. In the time of Elijah God had seven thousand men who would not turn to idols. We are led to believe that in every generation there were found men of faith. Notwithstanding their character could not outweigh the unfaithfulness of the masses.
The analogy is not reversible, because I know nothing from foreknowledge. I only know principles and processes which dictate an inevitable outcome. Yet I choose to partake in life that will inevitably result in death for me and everyone I bring into this world, yet it is not my decisions that cause those deaths directly.
Your analogy fails because you assume God created for immediate gratification, that only a good result now will satisfy God. God could indeed have foreknown that Adam would fall on his second day of existence and chosen to create because of the ultimate benefit that some would choose the way of salvation.
Your analogy of the vineyard fails for the same reason, and because the metaphor of the vineyard is not complete. Wherever the similitude fails your analogy must also fail. A grape vine does not have free will. It is an organism that responds mechanically to stimuli and resource availability.
Every Hebrew had a choice whether to worship regardless of how good Yahweh has been. That free will means that however rightfully God is due worship, they are not compelled to worship Him and may choose to worship the baals instead. In the time of Elijah God had seven thousand men who would not turn to idols. We are led to believe that in every generation there were found men of faith. Notwithstanding their character could not outweigh the unfaithfulness of the masses.