You say: You're making a classic Reformed error here- that the choices are "Free-will vs. Determinism". Nope- those are not the only two options. How about affirming both? Your "mentor" Luther did! However this isn’t the case. The Bondage of the Will by it’s very title shows you that Luther rejected free will. In his conclusion to the book he said:
“I SHALL here draw this book to a conclusion: prepared if it were necessary to pursue this Discussion still farther. Though I consider that I have now abundantly satisfied the godly man, who wishes to believe the truth without making resistance. For if we believe it to be true, that God fore-knows and fore-ordains all things; that He can be neither deceived nor hindered in His Prescience and Predestination; and that nothing can take place but according to His Will, (which reason herself is compelled to confess) then, even according to the testimony of reason herself, there can be no “Free-will” — in man, — in angel, — or in any creature!” (Sect. CLXVII, Cole)
You know Luther wrote other books, right? Read any?
I'm beginning to think you are not very well read regarding Luther, nor the context of the debate between him and Erasmus, because you don't seem to grasp the context of Luther's conclusion- and you aren't the first. IF you had read any of the links I gave you (still waiting on that) you would know that for Luther free will exists in man on matters not pertaining to salvation. That is, the will is in bondage to sin (not that there is no will left in man- hence the title of the book). Luther's position is that of Augustine, which is well known. I'd recommend you check out other books of Luther besides TBOTW, because he wrote more on this subject than that. You will soon find that Luther concurs with Augustine's notion, which he insisted was put into the Augustana. As Luther said ""Confessio Augustana mea; the Augsburg Confession is mine."
"Article XVIII: Of Free Will.
1] Of Free Will they teach that man's will has some liberty to choose civil righteousness, and to work 2] things subject to reason. But it has no power, without the Holy Ghost, to work the righteousness of God, that is, spiritual righteousness; since the natural man 3] receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God, 1 Cor. 2:14; but this righteousness is wrought in the heart when the Holy Ghost is received 4] through the Word. These things are said in as many words by Augustine in his Hypognosticon, Book III: We grant that all men have a free will, free, inasmuch as it has the judgment of reason; not that it is thereby capable, without God, either to begin, or, at least, to complete aught in things pertaining to God, but only in works of this life, whether good 5] or evil. "Good" I call those works which spring from the good in nature, such as, willing to labor in the field, to eat and drink, to have a friend, to clothe oneself, to build a house, to marry a wife, to raise cattle, to learn diverse useful arts, or whatsoever good 6]pertains to this life. For all of these things are not without dependence on the providence of God; yea, of Him and through Him they are and have their being. "Evil" 7] I call such works as willing to worship an idol, to commit murder, etc. 8] They condemn the Pelagians and others, who teach that without the Holy Ghost, by the power of nature alone, we are able to love God above all things; also to do the commandments of God as touching "the substance of the act." For, although nature is able in a manner to do the outward work, 9] (for it is able to keep the hands from theft and murder,) yet it cannot produce the inward motions, such as the fear of God, trust in God, chastity, patience, etc."
If you understand this background you will begin to understand the context of Luther's hard determinism in TBOTW. At present, you have not shown any developed understanding of this. You may already have it, but I haven't seen that yet, so I'm not putting you down or anything.
We seem to be going in circles. You are blindly following the
Reformed interpretation of Luther, and I'm following the Bible and I assess Luther by that standard and also by the standard of the many books he wrote- I have a fair share of them right here on my desk as I type. I hate to say but I just think you're not broadly enough read on the man to make all these pontifications about it. Even the links I cited clearly show that you are misunderstanding not just Luther but the matter as a whole.
Also in your previous post you said that “I read Bondage of the Will and didn't think much of it, as a matter of fact. I'm glad it isn't in the Book of Concord in the way the Catechisms are. It's filled with determinist philosphy, which is then interpreting the Bible texts. So on the one hand you seem to be disagreeing with Luther, yet on the other hand in your post you seem to be saying you agree with him.
Nothing wrong with that, is there? Luther is not my God or my only teacher. I agree with him when he agrees with scripture, and I don't agree with him when he doesn't. It's not that complicated really. He has works I think are brilliant (Large Catechism), some that are mildly interesting but nothing to rave about (TBOTW) and even one work I think is an abomination (eg. The Jews and Their Lies)
But at the end of the day, much of his books are his personal opinions, interpretations and so forth. They're not magisterial for anyone- even Lutherans. Unless they made it into the Book of Concord, they're not neccesary to hold to and be called a Lutheran.
Am I right LilLamb?
I haven’t been deceived by the Reformed, I’m in agreement with Luther and it's also true that the Reformed are in agreement with him as well on predestination, although Calvinists generally reject his belief in unlimited atonement as you'll be aware.
Luther did hold predestination to hell in TBOTW. For instance:
"On your view [Erasmus], God will elect nobody, and no place for election will be left; all that is left is freedom of will to heed or defy the long-suffering and wrath of God. But if God is thus robbed of His power and wisdom in election, what will He be but just that idol, Chance, under whose sway all things happen at random? Eventually, we shall come to this: that men may be saved and damned without God's knowledge! For He will not have marked out by sure election those that should be saved and those that should be damned; He will merely have set before all men His general long-suffering, which forbears and hardens, together with His chastening and punishing mercy, and left it to them to choose whether they would be saved or damned, while He Himself, perchance, goes off, as Homer says, to an Ethiopian banquet!"
So given the fact that Luther held TBOTW in high esteem there’s no truth to the idea that Luther didn’t hold predestination to hell and believed in free will. So you obviously don't agree with Luther.
Luther holding his own book in high esteem is nothing new. He says that about a lot of books in his long career.
I don't blindly follow any leader or teacher. Luther here is (unfortunately) building a bit of a straw man (Erasmus did have a doctrine of election- just not the same kind as Luther) and using a bit too much hyperbole as well. This quote completely misses an entire focus of the debate on sovereignty (which is why I don't think the book is all that good!) For example: A sovereign God could, through sovereign choice give men complete liberty over their wills. Or a sovereign God could, through sovereign choice choose to distance Himself from all of His creation (as the Deists taught)
It's not a question of sovereignty per se, it's a question of how God chooses to exercise it. A sovereign king can forcefully draft soldiers into his army or he can call up volunteers- either way, He's still sovereign!
Or how's this for a curve ball- perhaps God doesn't have only one way of acting out His will with His creation. Perhaps He irresistibly elects some and others are offered resistible grace? Perhaps the conversion of Paul is Divinely different to the conversion of Lydia!
So, you see we can go round and round on this little philosophy train or we can do as the Lutheran Confessions do- what does the Bible
actually say?
As noted (and strangely ignored by your response- what's with that?), God offers a choice to Israel in Dt 30. That's plain. There's even verses that speak of free will for the people of God (Ex. 35:21-29, 36:3-7, Lev 7:16, Dt 16:10 etc) So in the Bible there is both choices offered by God for people to make and also free will.
Then there's all that stuff about man's fallen nature and inability to choose salvation or even move towards it that you are familiar with.
Take both sides as read, without interpretation, without reasoning away one side or the other and what do you have? Simple: Article 2 of the FoC!
Great stuff, eh?
As regards your interpretation of Romans 9 I don’t agree with it but will need to read up on it to know why you think as you do and how best to counter it.
Do that all you like, but I'm a pastor and as such I don't have a lot of time for Bible games etc. I just read Rom 9 plainly. I don't need to seek out little arguments, commentaries or magisterial interpretations to counter other opinions and stuff because I have my own grey matter between my ears and a very good working knowledge of Greek. I believe what I believe, and that's what I believe! I may change my beliefs, but that's my own cross to bear- not yours.