Z Man
New member
How can YOU trust in YOUR God?!Knight said:If God knew the future exhaustively, every single prophecy, prediction and expectation He made would come to pass without fail. This is not the case.
How can YOU trust in YOUR God?!Knight said:If God knew the future exhaustively, every single prophecy, prediction and expectation He made would come to pass without fail. This is not the case.
Knight said:God wants to affect our freewill! He wants to move us in the direction that more closely conforms to His will.
If God were an uninvolved God watching creation from a distance one might be able to make a more persuasive argument that God can know our future without effecting our freewill (the argument still fails logically but it would be far more understandable). Yet that isn't the God of the Bible! Please don't misunderstand, I am not claiming that those arguing for freewill and exhaustive foreknowledge being compatible are claiming God is not involved, far from it! I am simply saying that their argument would be more believable if God weren't a personal God.
God is in the business of effecting our will without completely controlling our will. Sort of like gathering sheep. :sheep:
Thank you very much, that is very nice of you to say. I must admit I am excited about exploring this new avenue even further.logos_x said:On this thread, Knight posted the definitive argument that caused all my problems with the Open Veiw to disappear.
Once this is seen, God's redemptive interaction effectively elliminates any need for exhaustive foreknowledge. It also is the most consonant view with the Bible's presentation.
I therefore have reconsidered my previous arguments for exhaustive foreknowledge, and find them to be erroneous.
Thank you Knight for letting God use you to let me see it. :BRAVO:
Knight said:Thank you very much, that is very nice of you to say. I must admit I am excited about exploring this new avenue even further.
God I can trust, yet man I cannot.Z Man said:How can YOU trust in YOUR God?!
This does nothing to help your argument that God cannot know all of the future.Knight said:God I can trust, yet man I cannot.
Z Man you are a hard core Calvinist and therefore believe that God ordained every action for all of history and therefore you can also trust God in that you can trust that God is responsible for all of the evil that has ever occurred.
My post was a response to your comment "How can YOU trust in YOUR God?!" nothing more nothing less.Z Man said:This does nothing to help your argument that God cannot know all of the future.
Z Man said:This does nothing to help your argument that God cannot know all of the future.
Again, if God's prophecies and 'predictions' and promises and so forth can be thwarted by the will of man, how can you trust in Him to come through with what He has said will be done?
.death2, again you guys think that because of the providence of God that things will happen through necessity
My purpose in life is not to convince you of anything. If God wants you to know, you'll know.Knight said:My post was a response to your comment "How can YOU trust in YOUR God?!" nothing more nothing less.
I believe that I can convince you that I am right and you are wrong. I am not saying I will convince you, but I am saying it's theoretically possible that I could convince you.
You, on the other hand cannot share this belief.
Your own theology prevents you from having any ability whatsoever in convincing me that you are right and that I am wrong. Any appearence that you had convinced me of anything at all would simply be appearence and nothing more.
So tell me . . . should I conform my view regarding God's character to your view regarding God's character?
Should I do that?
Can I do that?
Emphasis on "I".
Why is having 'choice' important to you?death2impiety said:Therefore, If God knows the future He has set the future. If He has set the future our choices are made for us and we have no free will. In that case we have no choice in choosing God and we have no choice in what we do, period.
The Scriptures beg to differ.God does not know the future.
Why is having 'choice' important to you?
The Scriptures beg to differ.
You didn't answer my question. Why is 'choice' important? Why is it important that we be in control of our future?death2impiety said:Speaking from one mortal to another, our choice is what brings us to our eventual destination, our "future." If the future is known all our choices are known and thus predetermined.
Do you honestly believe God tested Abraham for Himself? The test Abraham endured wasn't for God, but for Abraham. God tested Abraham to make him a better, wiser man; one who's faith I'm sure tripled afterwards in God.I disagree. What about God commanding Abraham to kill Issaic, it was a test of faith. If God new the future he wouldn't have needed to test him in that way. He had his own choice to follow and trust or to disobey, and had God known the future (thus knowing the outcome) it would have been pointless to put him up to it. Or do you think God just wanted to make sure he was right. :think:
God's test of Abraham was as much for Abraham as it was for God. God could have known the result and still went through with the test.death2impiety said:Speaking from one mortal to another, our choice is what brings us to our eventual destination, our "future." If the future is known all our choices are known and thus predetermined.
I disagree. What about God commanding Abraham to kill Issaic, it was a test of faith. If God new the future he wouldn't have needed to test him in that way. He had his own choice to follow and trust or to disobey, and had God known the future (thus knowing the outcome) it would have been pointless to put him up to it. Or do you think God just wanted to make sure he was right. :think:
How so?nancy said:Clete comes close to an understanding of how contingent things fullfill God's providence without affecting their contingent nature.
They are fulfilled through their contingent nature by proximation to the goal God has planned.
This is very similar to Clete's argument of God letting things come to pass.
You didn't answer my question. Why is 'choice' important? Why is it important that we be in control of our future?
Do you honestly believe God tested Abraham for Himself? The test Abraham endured wasn't for God, but for Abraham. God tested Abraham to make him a better, wiser man; one who's faith I'm sure tripled afterwards in God.
You said, "If God new the future he wouldn't have needed to test him in that way. He had his own choice to follow and trust or to disobey, and had God known the future (thus knowing the outcome) it would have been pointless to put him up to it." But again, the test wasn't for God's benefit, it was for Abraham. God knowing the outcome had nothing to do with the test. Of course He knew the outcome. And even though He did, it didn't make the test pointless. Abraham didn't know the outcome. He needed to be tested. And that's what God did.