intro2faith said:
Please explain why this is not the case.
Would you like me to give you an example?
God had Jonah tell Nineveh that in 40 days they would be overthrown. God wasn't lying! This was a very specific prediction, to the day! Yet Nineveh, repented and therefore God repented and did not do to Nineveh what He said He was going to do.
I can give you dozens of examples if you like but in reality one clear case is enough to prove the point.
God knows much more than what is knowable to man. What is not knowable to man is knowable to God.
No disagreement there. :up:
If God knew Billy was NOT going to take a bite out of the apple, then Billy wouldn't. If God knew Billy WAS going to take a bite out of the apple, then Billy would. It's Billy's choice. God just knows the ultimate choice that he is going to make. He doesn't persuade Billy to either take a bite, or not to take a bite.
LOL . . you trying to have your cake and eat it to!
Do you believe God has perfect exhaustive foreknowledge or not? If so, God knows exactly what Billy will do! Otherwise God doesn't have perfect exhaustive foreknowledge does He?
So, please try again and please be more faithful to the actual hypothetical . . .
HYPOTHETICAL NUMBER ONE:
If God knows (perfectly) that in 1,000 years a child will be born and that child will be named Billy. God knows that in 1,010 years Billy (Billy is 10 years old) will pick up a apple and take a bite out of it.
In this hypothetical God know's all these facts perfectly and exhaustively, currently. God knows all of this 1,010 years in advance.
Tell me . . . does Billy have the freedom to not pick up the apple and take a bite out of it?