Though I am new to this forum I just found the topic to be interesting, so I am making this post having been away from the discussion, and hopefully I can connect to the discussion despite my having been away from it. The debate of this forum seems to be, to me, a question as to weather one is able to exercise a "free-will choice," that is, weather one has the opption not only to do an action, but also to decline the action, despite any external factors. It would also seem that this is a question of weather world events are deterministic or not.
And this is what I have to add: in order for a "free-will choice" to be made, one must be a free-agent. In other words, one must have authority to make such a decision. It is my understanding that humans are not free agents, in as much as they are contingent beings(contingency for me is dealing with dependance; humans are contingent because their life is not their own but dependent upon God in the Spirit). Thus, humanity is always wrapped up in a deterministic realm, in which their decisions are always locked into time, as time passes our decisions are made, and our fate is set according to those actions. We are locked into time at this point, and the end of our decisions is always death. In the flesh we are quite contingent, ergo humans cannot make "free-will decisions."
When the 'adam and when the woman eat from the tree in the garden, they attempt to make a free-will decision, but the Lord had cut that off from them by the command. They are not free-agents, but are rather vasals of the Lord. When they take of the tree in the garden they are immediately faced with judgment, i.e. the death penalty, which is the language being used in the scripture when God says "you will surely die." And the tree they eat from is the tree for "determining what is right." In a lot of ways these scriptures have been misread due to ignorance. The tree of "knowledge of good and evil" is not talking about the ability to suddenly see what the evil is and what the good is. "Evil" is not an ontological reality, but rather a distortion of what is good. So it would be impossible to "see" both good and evil, seeing how the only ontological reality is God and the Creation, and the Creation as it is contingent on God for life. So the "knowing" here of the tree is actually much more forceful. It is not a passive knowledge that comes to humanity, it is rather to set or determine what is right, what is pleasing. Up to this point God has been looked to to set what is right. Only when the humans eat from this tree in direct violation of God's command do they try to be free-agents, being like gods and setting for themselves what is right and pleasing. What is fascinating is that this only results in slavery and distortion, as the man and the woman have something to hide from one another and from God. Their "free-agency" leads to shame, and only reveals their utter frailty before God and before others, and thus making them slaves to the supposed agency (i.e. they try to pass the blame to others in order to remain hidden, to be sure that their "nakedness" is not exposed). And the Creator points the slavery out later on in the text as Cain comes into the picture, and God tells Cain not to let sin master him, but rather, master the sin.
In this story there is only one who has free-agency, and that is the Creator. Notice, the death penalty is not enforced by the Creator. Though the sentance on the 'adam and the woman should have been immediate death (as any death penalty would have been), the Lord witholds judgment, and thereby extends grace to the humans. The penalty reverts to more of consequences, as God reveals the true end of "human-agency": from dust you have been drawn and to dust you will return. And this becomes the defining reality of the Creator, that the Creator is a free-agent, able to pass judgment or withhold it, and humans, though like gods, will return to the dust showing their utter contingency, in their need for life in the Creator.
Humans are locked within time and thus are subject to decay and will never be "free-agents." Their agency can only reveal their frailty before others and becomes a means of hiding rather than a means to exercise an authority they do not have. Humans are beings of the earth, and will return to that earth if they remain in themselves. The scriptures declare that in "human free-agency" the end is deterministic: you will die.
Thus, free-agency must remain in the Creator, not a Creator who is locked into the deterministic events of human history, or even into the deterministic choices that the Creator makes. Notice how "Calvinism" becomes a distortion of the free-agency of God. "Calvinists" try to picture the God of Creation as the one who passively knows what will become of the Creation and thus bases his decision upon that passive knowledge. It is the God of Liebnitz, which is a monad "in-charge" of all others, and yet just as determined as any other monad. What is revealed in the scriptures is much more active, and I think Calvin was much closer to an understanding of God's agency as he saw the Creator using a preventative grace, God saves humanity from hell, for Calvin, thus overturning his own judgment (for Calvin this is simply not universal). In summation, the work of the Creator is not passive but rather active. Free-agency is not simly about passive knowledge, but rather, actively determining what is right, setting it and revoking it. And humans are incapable of this, thus are nothing more than deterministic beings that will end in death.
So the qualm I have with the discussion up till now is that the decision to go to bed or not at 10:00pm is not one that expresses free-agency. Whether you go to bed or not does not take away from your deterministic end. You will die whether you go to bed at 10:00pm or not. The flesh cannot do anything but return to what it was drawn from. The good still remains out of your reach. You cannot set what is right, for you cannot change the fact that you need sleep. You might be able to delay that for a while, but in the end if you do not sleep, you will die, in the same way that you must breath and you must eat. We are locked into this. The real question of free-agency is whether we can set what is right, whether we can judge, and what we find is that it remains outside of our reach, even as we try to bring it about. Jesus reveals the true nature of man in man's self, i.e. death. So do not talk to me about "free-will decision" unless that decision can overthrough judgment and our contingency on the Creator.
Grace and Peace,
Michael