- May 28, 2018
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But you're insisting here that the mere fact of God knowing it, is the sole cause of its happening. In some hypothetical world where God doesn't even exist but man does, should/would that fact of His non-existence, alone, necessarily change our choices, or perhaps suddenly render them to be free whereas otherwise they wouldn't be? And I'd submit that, from man's side of the fence that's exactly what we have, a world that's effectively free from His overt presence and therefore His moral authority and control, at least until we begin to recognize and believe in Him for ourselves. What will the servants do when the Master's gone away-and belief in His very existence is optional? We really show our faith by how we live-and that's why it's so important that people do not think that it's possible to be declared righteous apart from being righteous; the two are inseparable.
'The mere fact of God knowing it' is a lot more substantive a thing than you seem to take it to be. To my thinking, at least, God knows all fact because he is the cause of all fact.
But your hypothetical is, to me, like suggesting that God make a rock too big for him to pick up. The two notions you present are self contradictory. There can be no existence apart from God, so why conjecture on how it would be? More, the argument is circular, to suggest that such a thing happens apart from God as proven by a universe apart from God. But look up "God's Immanence."
I like your description of the fact that God's overt presence is lacking, 'from man's side of the fence', apart from faith. But while I more or less agree with you there, I'm not sure what that has to do with the hypothetical. Perhaps you only mean to say, "Since it is as if God is not here, to some of us, are not our choices then free, since they are [as if] free of causation?" No, whether a person considers God to be non-existent or irrelevant or not, as even many atheists would admit, everything we do, think and are is caused. Our will is not free, in the sense that it can violate cause-and-effect.
But to deal with what I think is the reason for your hyposthetical
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