truefiction1
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- Dec 16, 2011
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I suggest that the cause for the nature of a creature's will is not for us to know, and that we can't know or understand that which only God is big enough to understand. However, that the freewill of the creatures that God makes in His image and likeness is most precious to God, because it is the only means by which Divine Love can be expressed, or real, on the part of the creature... well... to know this is a gift of the Holy Spirit, Who grants Love, the greatest gift, and is therefor the teaching of the Church and always has been.Your position throughout this thread has been about what role our will plays in our relationship with God. You seem to think that this runs counter to Calvinism (monergism), but it does not. The human will determines our attitude and behavior toward God, and both sides agree on that.
So, what determines the will? As far as I can tell, you've never proposed an answer to this issue, which is precisely what Calvinism is all about. All of your responses have been geared toward the suggestion that God does not override our will to change our relationship with him, but both sides already agree on that. A person lives according to his will, not in spite of it.
Everything has a cause, though, and you have not presented a cause for the nature of a person's will. Some would say that the human will is a product of circumstance, but is God not sovereign over circumstances? Some seem to think that the human will has no cause but itself, making it an effect with no cause, or an original cause, but isn't God the only original cause in our universe? Some would regard it as a product of random chance, but randomness is not a real thing, other than an expression of a person's inability to comprehend the complex interactions leading to an event.
Something caused a human will to be what it is, because everything has a cause. If God was not involved, then something out of God's control led a man to be what he is, or the man led himself to be what he is, making the man a god beyond the control of God, an effect without a cause, a self-extant being like the I Am (supporting the idolatry of self).
The love of a will free from the sovereignty of God is a love of self.
All those who have received this gift of Love know full well the role that freewill plays in it, and they also know of the Love that God has even for so-called reprobates, and how God mourns over them. How do they know this? Because they too are become by grace as God is by nature, and so they know what it is to mourn for all of those lost to the Kingdom of Heaven.
We've nothing to learn from Calvin that was not previously known by every child of the Living God who came before, and who comes after, and we don't care to listen to murders, such as he was. Predestination exists with freewill intact, with nobody but God being big enough to know what determines the nature of a creature's will or whatever reasons lie behind it. Only God knows the end and fate of all his creatures. We are not judges of who are the elect and who are reprobate. Ours is only to baptize all nations, and to teach all that our Lord, Christ, has commanded us. We are to believe and do the will of His Father, Who is our Father. We can't know who are the saints who will persevere to the end and who will not, and so we must, by the help of God's grace, exercise our freewill in the way that will keep us on the narrow path; in faith, hope, and Love, because we don't know when our end will come, and so we must always be ready, as our Lord Himself teaches (Matthew 25:13).
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