The_Horses_Boy said:
A common beleif is that God created everyone and he knows them even before they are born. He know what they will do.
If you beleive that God created everything, is all knowing and knows all that will happen, then is it sensible that we are predestined? God has created all and knows all that will happen. He knows if we will accept him before he creates us. Isn't this, in essence, predestination?
I am young and trying to figure these different things out. Is it possible for free will and predetermination, if God knows all?
i think in this idea of God being all-knowing, there is no way for us to understand this. we live in a 24 hour time frame. God "lives" in a place that isn't controlled in that manner.
nobody can logically tie free-will into predestination with God. cause the main problem comes when which will is ultimately more powerful...predestination-God's Will is more powerful, free-will-humanity's will is more powerful than a supposed "omnipotent" being's will. the issues only seem to come out, when certain concerns come about.
for example, if predestination is true, then why did He do the things He did? if God knew that people were going to come to Him, there would be no use for the Gospel to even be given us, because everything was done just fine before Jesus came to this earth.
if free-will is true, then humanity's will is more powerful than God's, cause we know what God's Will is. imagine, a sappy god sending his son to earth. having all the power on his behalf, but letting free-will forever take his beloved creation away. inevitably, the choice/power is on humanity, not on God to actually save. and i don't know about anyone else, but that's a pathetic description of a supposed just, omnipotent, all knowing God, because inevitably, i wonder if the gift of the Gospel was half hearted, cause He knew that people would reject it.
so i personally believe that free-will and pre-destination are a bit off. both having point of truth, but not coming to the full circle of truth.
just my 2 cents.