Edit: Removed the redundant portion. I don't know how it got on there, but it looked like I was the one responding to myself!
So then you agree with Martin Luther's position that our definition of "free will" actually means we don't have free will to do anything, only the free will to do what is in our nature. Being sinful in nature and "bent inwards" that means we are only free to will ourselves to more sin. We are not free to will ourselves to doing what God can do or wants us to do unless he has given us the capacity to be good, holy, blameless, etc.
More or less correct --I doubt Luther said we don't will to do anything, but perhaps that it is not entirely free. We do have choice, we do have will. One of the best treatments I've heard on the matter says what we should all do is drop the word "free" from freewill, so that we can discuss just how this actually works.
Interesting. So he doesn't just know as a result of the fact, but he must know because he causes it? Is this something related to the Elect? God chose already who will be the elect?
'Fact' doesn't 'just happen'. It is caused, all of it, except First Cause, whom the Bible refers to as the "I AM" or, "I AM THAT I AM". (There we see the difference between God and everything else. Anything that 'becomes', comes from something that was before it. But First Cause does not become. It only IS.)
Yes, the Elect are called that because they are chosen, and, according to Scripture, chosen before the foundation of the world. It doesn't make sense to me to think God would "choose" someone for salvation because he merely foresaw that they would be saved. It is circular. --What is there to choose?
Thank you for the recommendation. Those sound interesting!
There are several more, but just remember, they don't 'exist' by themselves. And, they can be a little hard to take, one by one, because God is not like us.
True and agreed. It was just something I thought of and sounded reasonable to believe although I don't believe He doesn't know what I will choose. He must know otherwise he would only be a limited God.
Agreed. But, again, as First Cause, he is not only not limited in what he knows, but everything besides himself is only what he makes it. (And again, this does not deny actual choice, because our choices are among the many ways he accomplishes what he set out to do.) If he causes it, of course he knows it.
To say that there are things he did not cause, even if he knows about them, is also to invoke a limited god.
Hmm. I think verses like:
John 3:16 where it says, "anyone who believes" .....that makes it sound like we have a choice and determine if we will receive salvation or reject it. Even stuff like
Luke 9:23, you have to deny yourself and pick up the cross daily. That seems to me to be a choice we have to make everyday. If we don't, then we are not true disciples/followers of Jesus. There's probably 100 more verses that present this idea that it is up to us to "choose" to believe/accept/obey and IF you don't, then you will perish from your sins and forever be separated from God (unsaved).
We do have a choice, (although, in the Greek, the words we want to get the notion, "anyone who believes", out of, only says, "all those believing". The fact that we have choice does not deny the fact that we are chosen first. And yes, I agree we choose all the time. But the Born-Again will choose according to their inclinations, just as the lost will choose according to
their inclinations.
Very interesting haha. That would be one heck of a universe!! Hmm.... if everyone chose to reject God, then it would seem to me that God would almost be put to "shame" because he literally just played with himself and his own creation rejected him 100% so wasted time and what was it all for? Therefore, God would never just allow himself to waste his own time and go through all this just so at the end of it nobody will be saved. It does support what you are saying that God then MUST be the causation behind people's salvation. This does seem to suggest that Election must hold truth or some truth.
When I consider the fact that nothing is up to chance --and in fact that it is self-contradictory to say that something can happen by chance-- the whole notion of multiple universes based on what we suppose are possibilities, seems ludicrous.
(We haven't even got any proof, as far as I know, that anyone even
can choose what they end up not choosing. The obnoxious fact is right there in front of our faces that we have never yet chosen something that we have not chosen, so how can we say it is possible that we could? I say this, tongue-in-cheek, but, in fact, I've never heard a good rebuttal to it. Even in Scripture where God speaks contingently, giving people a choice between this path and that, it never says that they actually chose anything except what they chose. It only says that they have real choice between options.)
I definitely don't think B is correct either. A would be more likely. It sounds to me you are saying A but adding that it is not we who choose but that God has already chosen?
No. Well, no and yes. When it comes to being born-again, the slave to sin will not, and therefore is unable, to submit to God's law, or to please God, and we read also that "whatsoever is not of faith, is sin". The slave to sin is unable to do more than lip service to the Gospel. (And, to add to that, none of us has the integrity, strength of will, knowledge and understanding of just what one is committing to, and the dedication to accomplish such a thing even if we "decide for Christ".) The ones to whom God chose to show mercy will come to Christ, but that, only because God has already done that change from "death to life" in them. If I desire to submit to God, the only way it is a real is by God doing it in me.
But subsequent to regeneration, we do choose God, still, because of God in us. Our obedience is not just our effort, but God's work in us. Our desire for him, and desire for purity, and Godliness, and so on, is because HE is in us.