God is perfect, and nothing he or anyone else does can add to his perfection. So he has no need to create or do good or anything of the like. However, goodness and love are diffusive of themselves, therefore it is natural for God's goodness to overflow into creation.
That isn't what I asked, really. I asked about how much desire God has to do good, versus how much desire God has to do nothing. These are the terms of a free choice that you set out in the beginning, I'm going to stick with those even though your new wording seems to be trying to move away from that. If you're saying that God made a completely free choice to create and completely free choices to do good, then you're saying that His desire to create and do good is equal to His desire to do nothing. It isn't about what He "needs" to do, never was. It's about what He
wants to do and how badly He wants to do it.
So is this what you're saying, that God is exactly as content to do nothing as He is to do something?
We would say that God allows evil for the purpose of a greater good.
"Allow" is such a passive tone. Isaiah doesn't try to be so passive. And while I am fine with agreeing that God won't do an evil act Himself, and I'm fine with the idea that even if God knows His creation is going to do evil it is still their choice, the word "allow" implies that evil is perfectly natural and will be a result through no action of God's at all, but that isn't true.
FWE didn't always exist. God doesn't have it, so it had to be created. And what are the necessary components of having FWE? A desire to do good coupled with a desire to do evil so that the act of one or the other isn't determined or guaranteed. That means God had to make evil desirable in order for us to ever do evil. Good, being the natural and fundamental thing that it is, would naturally flow into His creation, making intelligent beings have a desire to do good, sure. But evil doesn't arise naturally. You have to have a desire to do evil, and that doesn't happen naturally because evil isn't natural.
If God chooses to act his act will be good.
That's not what I asked. I asked if He will do the
most good thing.
Sorry, I'm not sure what you're asking here.
I will take a guess that you are asking why omnibenevolence implies ~FWE. God does not choose evil because to choose evil is to act irrationally, and God is perfectly rational. God does not choose evil because to choose evil is to choose to create some privation--some lack of being--and God is the creator, the one who brings being out of non-being, not vice versa.
What I'm getting at is whether God will simply do a good thing because He likes doing good things, and as long as it's a good thing He is fine with it
or does He consider the outcomes, both direct and indirect, of His choice to act and act accordingly.
Consider this: I see a homeless woman and decide to give her some money. If I give her $10, that is good. If I give her $1,000 that is better. However, if I give her $1,000,000 and she ends up becoming a greedy and selfish rich person in love with money and who begins to look down her nose at people with less wealth than her, that is actually worse.
Does God consider any of that if He decides to help her, or does He just pick whatever good thing and does it. Even giving her $1,000,000 is the best thing if you don't consider all the bad that comes from it.
So, if God is "omnibenevolent" does that mean He is guaranteed to always do the
most good thing, or just that everything He does is good in some way, if He decides to do anything at all?
Of course I address this issue in more detail in my last post to which you did not directly reply. Let's look at your argument:
- God, as the greatest possible being, possesses every creaturely perfection/good.
- Creatures possess FWE, and this is good because it allows their choices to be meritorious.
- Therefore we arrive at the disjunction: either God is not the greatest possible being, or God possesses FWE, or FWE is not good. All three cannot be true.
Again, the answer to your argument is that there are certain perfections/goods that belong properly to creatures and not to God. Not everything that is good for creatures is good for God. For example, it is good for creatures to take food and water, for this reinforces their nature as something which is dependent. God need not take food and water, even though it is good for creatures to do so, because God is not the sort of thing which is dependent. Indeed he is rather the sort of thing which everything else depends on.
The principle of merit runs along the same lines. It reinforces the human's nature as something which is dependent, receptive, progressing, and growing. Since the human is these things--especially on earth--it is good to perform actions which reflect this reality. It is in accord with truth. Yet meriting does not reflect the reality of God, for God is not dependent, receptive, progressing, or growing.
Well, it's good that you're moving towards acknowledging that it is meriting instead of calling it a "gift" as you did originally. It certainly isn't a "gift" if there are demands involved. Those are wages, and generous as they may be, it absolutely isn't a "gift".
But you're going to have to do better to explain why meriting is good. Will something bad happen if it isn't reinforced? If so, what? If not, why does it need reinforced? People don't need to be able to forget things. Why isn't simply knowing good enough?