Hm. How is it understood -- all I can gather from this assertion is that we're self-causing agents that are unable to cause things within ourselves. What's preventing this idea from being self-inconsistent?
More questions about this --
If we're self-causing, doesn't that make us uncreated? I believe there's a qualification here for God's creation of the agent.
A query of those who object regarding "free agency" would help show whether anyone is actually objecting to this position in the first place. Again, the question of "free agency" is a non-issue to Calvinists. I'll do it in reverse: what's different between free agency and self-causing agency?
What contributes to the self-causing cause? That is, if it's "something" within me that does the causing, what's contributing to it as a cause?
What exactly do you mean by "cause things within ourselves"? By agent causation I mean we are capable of causing our own acts in a way that is not reducible to causation by circumstances or events. Think of inanimate objects that we say are caused. We would say that if such a causation occurred, that it would be between events or states of affairs. The dam's breaking was an event that was caused by a set of other events, the dam being weak, the flood water being strong and so on. Yet if man is accountable for his actions, then there is some event that is caused, not by other events or states of affairs but by the agent himself. In some sense we "cause" our desires that manifest into actions in a way that those desires derive from our wants, so I suppose you could say we cause things within ourselves that way.
No, I do not think that would make the agent uncreated however it would make the agent a 'prime mover unmoved' in
only those things he causes on his own.
It's not an issue for many Christians too. And I don't suspect there is much of a difference.
We're unable to cause things within ourselves, while we're self-causing agents?
We can "cause" things within ourselves as in our desires and such, but there are things that we cannot cause within ourselves that only God is capable of bringing about. I do not see any inconsistency here.
Preventing a direct address prevents me from explaining it to you. On the other hand, preventing a direct address is the point.
You mean like my street address and all that? You've really got me confused now, I have no idea what the heck you are talking about and still do not understand why an explanation cannot be given and instead more vagueness.
Mkay.
God does predestine the reprobate, but not in the same manner in which God predestines the elect. For the reprobate, God is leaving the reprobate as they are, to be condemned by His foreordained judgment on the Last Day. God created the reprobate. The reprobate fell. The reprobate are predestined to condemnation for their sinfulness, and thus offend the Good God of the Universe.
The elect are predestined to glory on very different terms, and different rules.
Right, because God directly intervenes to predestine the elect while He does not need to for the reprobate. If the reprobate are 'left' as they are and there is no divine intervention, then they are not predestined to damnation.
Predestination is centralized around intervention so if God is not involved with those events He foreknows of, it cannot be adequately claimed as an event that is predestined. As I was saying earlier, scripture only attests to predestination in the sense of salvation, and no other sense of predestination is conveyed, i.e. a predestination of the damned. Also, what do you mean God "created the reprobate"? Do you mean God fashioned the reprobate's nature? Then that direct intervention you were saying does not exist is indeed present in their damnation.
The damned are so as a result of God electing the some of humanity to salvation, which is to say that there is a necessitated damnation of the remnants of man. That is not in any sense equivalent to saying that God predestined them to damnation, so I don't think we should claim that.