Can't remember what I was to cite...
I think it was compatibilist free will, which will not be found in the bible because it doesn't exist in the bible.
So...
What I asked was this: "Which theology states that our will is dependent on coercion? Can you cite it?" I didn't ask you to cite something from the Bible. I wanted a citation, perhaps an excerpt from some confession or denominational statement, that states that our will is dependent on coercion. Since you didn't do so, but continuing upon a false premise, with "So..." the rest of your post does nothing to further the discussion as it had gone.
However, I will answer some of the points in your post, since they are relevant to the core issue anyhow (i.e. not just 'coercion' as you were using the term).
As I implied in a post a few minutes ago, we don't operate on a spiritual economy with God, as separate, able, players. This isn't Mt Olympus, where other deities negotiate with Zeus, or his father or whatever. The Romans 9 picture of clay in the Potter's hands is a far more accurate notion of what we are. Inanimate, compared to him. Material, to do with as the Potter pleases. The clay has no rights, to be demanded of him. There is no principle to which the Potter must answer concerning justice done to the clay. By the way, we are mostly ignorant of his justice and how it applies, though we know enough to be without excuse.
Notice that the clay is formed for a PURPOSE, for a use. It is not made for itself.
A. Determinism
The view outlined in the introduction of this article when we quoted from the Belgic - and Westminster confession can be taken as our definition of
determinism. More accurately, it can be described as
theological determinism. Stated in simple terms, theological determinism can be defined as:
God providentially determines everything that comes to pass, including human choices [
5].
B. Indeterminism
Indeterminism is basically the negation of determinism. In the context of theological determinism, we can define it as such:
God does not providentially determine everything that comes to pass, [or at least not all human choices].
C. Moral responsibility
A person is morally responsible for a given action if and only if that action is morally significant. An action is morally significant if it involves "good" or "bad", "right" or "wrong". It is morally significant if a person deserves blame or praise for their action. Bad actions deserve blame, whereas good actions deserve praise [6].
D. Compatibilism
Compatibilism is the thesis that determinism is compatible with moral responsibility. This is the Calvinist position.
It means God has granted us the ability to act freely (that is, voluntarily without being coerced into doing something we don't want to do), but not independent from God nor free from our desires, but to act according to our desires and nature. In other words, voluntary choice (to choose to act as we please) is compatible with determinism.
That we act according to our nature and desires is Scriptural (Luke 6:42-45), but we'll get to that later.
E. Incompatibilism
Incompatibilism is the denial of compatibilism. It is the thesis that determinism is incompatible with moral responsibility: If human agents are determined, they cannot be blamed for anything that they choose to do.
F. Free will
Someone has free will if they have the power or ability to make morally responsible choices.
Bignon notes that this definition importantly says nothing about the choices being determined or not. Free will does not necessitate indeterminism. Free will can be used by both determinists and indeterminists to refer to what they take to be morally responsible choices and actions [7].
For example, Calvin, in examining the question of free will, says that if we mean by free will that fallen man has the ability to choose what he wants, then of course fallen man has free will [8].
G. Libertarianism (libertarian free will)
Libertarian free will is the ability to make free choices that are not determined by prior conditions. It is the sort of free will that persons must have if incompatibilism is true: it is a free will that is not determinist, and it is the sort of free will that Calvinists must reject.
source:
Calvinism, human free will, and divine sovereignty explained
I like the following explanation and why it doesn't work...put simply, IF GOD determines everything, that would include YOUR CHOICE of something.
IOW, of course it's what you desire, God makes you desire it.
Compatibilists (Calvinists) attempt to maintain that men are free in the sense that they are “doing what they desire.” However, this appears to be an insufficient explanation to maintain any sense of true freedom considering that compatibilists also affirm that even the desires and thoughts of men are decreed by God. (i.e. WCF: “God has decreed whatsoever comes to pass.”)
This is an important circularity in the claim by Calvinists that humans can be considered genuinely free so long as their actions are in accordance with their desires (i.e. “voluntary”). Given the long-held Calvinistic belief that all events and actions are decreed by God, then human desire (the very thing that compatibilists claim allows human choices to be considered free) must itself also be decreed. But if so, then there is nothing outside of or beyond God’s decree on which human freedom might be based.
Put differently, there is no such thing as what the human really wants to do in a given situation, considered somehow apart from God’s desire in the matter (i.e., God’s desire as to what the human agent will desire). In the compatibilist scheme, human desire is wholly derived from and wholly bound to the divine desire. God’s decree encompasses everything, even the desires that underlie human choices.
This is a critical point, because it undercuts the plausibility of the compatibilist’s argument that desire can be considered the basis for human freedom. When you define freedom in terms of ‘doing what one wants to do’, it initially appears plausible only because it subtly evokes a sense of independence or ownership on the part of the human agent for his choices.
source: Why the Theory of Compatibilism Falls Short
I had all this answered so well, so thoroughly, so witty! Hit Post Reply and closed the window before I realized I wasn't online. Guess you'll have to take my word for it that I solidly trounced your objections, haha!
I'll try to put a much shorter rebuttal here: Starting from the bottom, I don't care what the writer thinks "a compatibilist" argues, I don't say desire is the basis for human freedom. To me, that is a strawman. Actually, I don't even like the sound of the word, compatibilist. But anyhow, the basis for human freedom is God's decree.
Also, the argument of the last 4 paragraphs above depends on the same notion visible from the beginning of the claim of "libertarian free will". By definition, libertarian freewill is will (or at least choice) apart from causation. Not only is that illogical, but it is unBiblical, as has been shown repeatedly and in many passages. It is self-determination, by definition, and it assumes warranted worth of the person apart from Christ. WRONG! The clay has no rights.
So if I beat up my dog every day, I am JUST in doing so because I'm his master?
Could we define JUST please?
It means GIVING TO EVERYONE WHAT THEY DESERVE.
If God made a plan for me to become saved because He knew Adam would fall,
and I decide NOT to take advantage of it and end up in hell - that is justice.
If God arbitrarily decides who is to be saved or damned - that is NOT justice.
As to the beginning of your statement above, IF God decides ALL, you are NOT freely choosing.
Because your preference has been decided for you by God - and not by your circumstances.
But why are you beating your dog? JK
Nobody I know says God does anything arbitrarily. That is a strawman. God forms the clay as he pleases, for his own purposes.
Also, if my preferences are caused by my circumstances they were caused by God, because my circumstance were caused by God.
This is not Mt Olympus where we are gods and demi-gods negotiating with Zeus.
I wonder why works was such as issue with you. I wonder if you went to a holiness church that could damage persons.
Only God could make demands of us -- not persons or churches.
Because, if so, the demands become burdensome, but God's commandments are not burdensome. As Jesus stated.
Choosing God is an act of the will - it's not a feeling we get (although sometimes the Holy Spirit does kick-in).
God does not make us obey...He wants us to obey out of love for Him.
The obedience does not have to be perfect.
We do our best,
Jesus does the rest.
I'm sorry you felt this way and believe it was due to incorrect teaching of the NT doctrine.
I know that we can feel secure of our salvation, as long as we're kneeling at the foot of the cross.
Not holiness. A missionary kid at a Bible campus. The usual Fundamentalist Dispensationalist Semi-Arminian Evangelical Methodist-leaning mix of people brought me up. Daily Bible and the rest of life growing up from a Bible point of view, including memorization of lots of Bible.
But you have misunderstood me. I didn't expect perfection. I expected consistency and growth and the much-taught "Christian Victory" that I was told was more than theory. "If you love me, you will keep my commandments." "...does not continue to sin." etc. etc. Bible.
I had an epiphany. Jesus just presented Himself to me.
I think God reveals Himself to everyone, but then we have the responsibility to respond NO or YES.
It's this response that will justify God's refusal of us at the judgment.
When we stand before God, will we say that we're saved because He saved us?
Or can we say that we're saved because we accepted His love?
I'm reminded of the washing of the feet.
Peter wanted to refuse the washing...he was, in effect, refusing God's love.
Jesus told him that he must accept or Peter would not belong to Him.
In the end Peter said YES.
This is how I understand God's revelation and our reply.
Is "obedience" salvation? Is "submission" salvation? Of course not. Obedience and submission are results of regeneration.
You have not answered the issue of 'inability' Romans 8:5-8; nor 'dead in sins' Ephesians 2:1-10.
Are you saying your subjective perception is altogether accurate —that because that is when you noticed the change, and that since you noticed it after you responded to him, that it cannot be that you were changed "logically-before" you responded to him? Is it not possible that when "Jesus just presented Himself" to you, that THAT was when he changed you, or even before that?
Is it not possible that you would not have heard his voice (Rev. 3:20) calling out to you, to open the door to his fellowship, if you were not already born-again, and your heart already changed?
I agree.
Faith is a gift.
Eph 2:8 ... it is an accepted fact that the gifts are: Grace, Faith, Salvation
Then is not faith the work of God? It is the Spirit of God in us that generates saving faith, not the will of man.
Agreed. We are enabled to obey.
But how can you speak of CHOICE if you believe God predestined everything?
God's decree is the only warrant for choice. God is the source of all reality.
Agreed. The first cause can have no cause.
LOL
This is true. No one really understands quantum theory. I'm at the top of the list!
In fact, I'm not qualified to continue with this conversation.
Nothing drilled into me by secular sources.
I'm just interested in theology - understanding God.
I will say that I've attended two denominations and am familiar with a 3rd and they agree on the fact that God does not choose arbitrarily,
but based on our decision to reply YES to Him.
The notion that God choosing "arbitrarily" is the only alternative to basing his choice on our decision to reply YES, is false. I don't see anything in Calvinism, Reformed Theology, nor anything in the Bible to even consider that. Where did that come from? God does nothing arbitrarily.