When I spoke of man acting according to his nature, I was speaking more generally about the principle that man chooses according to his strongest desire at the time of the choice. Man does have free will insofar as he is freely able to choose that which he desires. The problem is that unregenerate man's desires are only for sin and self. Thus from a moral standpoint his will is not free...it is in slavery to sin and until it is set free from its slavery to sin it will never choose God.
When Calvinists say that unregenerate man cannot choose God, the understanding of man's natural free will and the reality of his total depravity are implicit and necessary to that understanding. It is not a matter of there being a fundamental flaw in the natural function of the will...it's a matter of the complete absence of desire in the heart. The statement is perfectly true that IF a man desired to choose God THEN he could and would do so. The issue is that unregenerate man doesn't have that desire. Until and unless someone desires to choose something, he never will choose that something.
The challenge I have often put forth is for someone who takes issue with this understanding of the will to provide me with any example of an individual who chooses something other than that which he desires most from the options presented him. I have yet to be provided with any such example.
To address you last few questions, man is indeed passive with respect to the new birth (regeneration) itself. God does not regenerate man in response to anything man does. Rightly said then, regeneration is monergistic. The faith that results however is rightly said to be synergistic insofar as that faith is the natural response of the will, according to the renewed heart, to the call of the Gospel. That's why I take extreme exception to the repeated assertion by Ben johnson that Calvinists teach faith is "instilled" or "imparted" to man...that it's really God's faith and not the individual person's faith. While that faith is necessarily the result of God's sovereign work in the man, it is nevertheless wholly a function of the individual's will in accordance with the desire of his heart upon the hearing of the Word.
The best example I can give is that of the inspiration of the Holy Scriptures. God did not dictate the Scriptures word for word to the authors...they are the words of the authors in their language with their tendencies and idiosyncrasies. Yet we also believe that the Scriptures are the infallible and perfect Word of God. They were not dictated, they were inspired. God assured with perfect certainty that His Word would be given by the authors, yet it was in perfect accordance with the will of the authors. Primary (God) and secondary (man) causality both firmly established and working in perfect accordance.
I understand all of that. But you are still avocating a determinism and speaking in the philosophical terms of cause and effect. So it goes, God creates the desire in man and as sure as the apple falls from the tree to the earth man acts in accordance by believing. How could God be sovereign otherwise would of course be the question. "Someone could choose something different and thwart his plan!" And perpetual sin from the unregenerates is just as certain, as man is said to be able to act only in accordance with his sin nature. So I was interested in your take on the whole predestination picture in terms of the philopsophy of primary and secondary causes you espouse, if you have thought it through that far... And this is in light of the common claim that God knows every detail of the future precisely because he has ordered it all. My questions in Item #1 are hardly addressed, as to the different roads of sin taken by individuals and their detailed sinful choices, all as this relates to God ordering all future events. Question #2 wasn`t answered....
#3 was answered in a way, but the born again in your view is still acting in irrevocable accord with the nature so given just as the sinner that only sins so this still presents a difficulty in denying the reality of choice in one while granting it to the other. You basically claimed, as to the unregenerate sinner, that they can do no other and thus have no choice. According to you those born anew can do none other than believe the Gospel when presented so you can reasonably apply no choice there as well and with a similar standard. Maybe that is all your buddy Ben Johnson meant.... I mean you say the unregenerate can`t want to believe. The regenerate can`t not want to can they? And it is God who came upon them stealthily to create a condition of the heart to assure this outcome. And actually this really brings me to what I was trying to find out. According to you, God uses the principles of primary and secondary causes to bring about a specific action on the part of the elect to believe the Gospel. But what about all the other decisions men and women make in their lives? Same principles? God creates the desire which makes certain the actions? It was noted that many paths and a variety actions can flow from a sin nature, as could that from a born again for that matter. For example, why does one unregenerate become a law abiding intellectual atheist while another a serial killer? So for God to order all events down to the slightest detail it would appear the need for a rather comphrehensive approach. And how comprehensive is this move the heart to secure a specific action, "primary, secondary causation" approach applied? That is assuming you hold the view that foreknowledge is precisely had because God has predestined all future events and that must include personal decisions.
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