Lonster; what happened? You started out answering questions fairly directly, and now you've switched to mostly obfuscating and nit-picking. If you don't want to defend what you believe, then please, by all means, don't think God needs help.
This is relevant to the topic. Would you agree it's true?So Satan was not created by God originally as a angel of light? If Satan was created by God, then he is just another part of God's foreknowledge, no different from humans in their ability to throw "ifs" into God's plans.
Do you even understand that when you put an "if" into your account, that you started arguing for the Open View?Yorzhik said:Because you keep saying things as if the Open View were true, but you claim to be explaining exhaustive foreknowledge. Either you didn't mean what you said in your explanation, or you didn't understand what you were trying to explain.
It's a reasonable question. It's easy to answer. Look, I can do it... [Yorzhik clears throat]... "no". See? it isn't that hard, but you won't answer because for being what you call a stupid question, it is at the foundation of what you believe and answering directly would expose your own conscience. Stupid questions don't do that much; your assessment is wrong.Yorzhik said:So God can make a circle with corners and not only could God do it, but it would be logical. Correct?
Yorzhik said:I realize that is a big sentence, so all we really need to know from you, in a direct and clear manner: Is exhaustive foreknowledge true? Does logic exist? Do you realize you cannot have an "if" in what you are saying and also be talking about the Settled View/Exhaustive Foreknowledge?Thanks for the straight answer. The bolded part needs more explanation. Perhaps this would help: when given the choice between doing something loving, or fulfilling prophecy, what does God prefer to do? God tells us directly in the bible.Lonster said:There are some good philosophical arguments why it would need to be true from other aspects we know about Him (Omnipotence, Eternality, and Omnipresent). These make a united stance in favor of Exhaustive foreknowledge, but at this point, I'm only prepared to expound "Future Knowledge." I believe God has this without question.
Why would it be troubling? Could you describe the trouble you'd have with God knowing that what He was doing was right? You realize you are saying you are judging God here?Yorzhik said:Do you mean we cannot judge God and if, for instance, God were to throw all the Christians into eternal torment you'd have no problem with that because God did it?Lonster said:Yes. While it may be troubling, whatever God does is right by His very nature and our very nature. We are the created things. God 'owns' us. He can do whatever He likes with what He owns.
This isn't that hard to answer. You don't need to wait for someone else to come along, you have your own God-given mind.Yorzhik said:If you include an "if" in your account, then the story includes a contingency that is not settled. Does the "if" exist in your statement? It does. But there are no "ifs" in the Settled View (unless you don't understand the Settled View/exhaustive foreknowledge, or if you think God-can-do-something-illogical-because-God-does-it). If there is an "if" in the story of Jonah and exhaustive foreknowledge is true and logic exists, then the person responsible is the person that had God tell Jonah to go to Nineveh and the story that God had put in His Word was from His perspective which included an "if".
Now, I realize the implication of this would cause a lot of grief in your worldview and how your relationship with God works. I know it not because I'm prideful about the power of the Open View, but because I had to go through the depression and pain myself of re-aligning my relationship with God. It's like giving your friend a sweater every birthday, and they thank you every time, but then later you find out they don't like sweaters but their love for you was greater than their love for some temporal object. You'd feel bad about giving them all those sweaters, but then you would later feel good about giving them something they actually liked.