- Jan 23, 2016
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As Dean points out above, Calvinists (and others) do not believe that "free will" is anything more than an illusion. I am not seeing this "shared tension" you speak of.
If God is omnipotent, omniscient, and omnibenevolent, and yet there exists damnation and death, then there is an implicit tension. The Arminian resolves that tension by saying that God allows us the freedom to choose contrary to his benevolence.
The Calvinists that I have known personally would say that we do have free will, but only in the sense that we are free to do that which we most desire. Since, for any given choice, there can be only one greatest desire, the outcome of every choice we make is already known to an omniscient God who knows what the circumstances will be at every given moment and what we will desire in response. Likewise, God, in his omnipotence can certainly shape conditions to cause our greatest desire to be to do that which accomplishes his ends, even if it is in total rebellion to him. So, the compatibilist would argue that we have free will, but this does not imply the ability to truly choose between alternatives.
It sounds like you are proposing the idea that free will does not exist, neither in a compatibilist sense nor in a libertarian sense. If that is the case, then yeah, I would agree with you, we are quite far apart theologically.
But the difference between Calvinist compatibilism and Arminian foreknowledge is much more slight.
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