- May 28, 2018
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When I said 'choice', I did not mean 'choose without compulsion'. (Side comment: when I argue with Atheists about free will, they will happily admit cause-and-effect rules, making choice under compulsion ("we are, after all, only higher-order animals"), yet they insist on self-determination. So they object to the logic that puts God (First Cause) at the head of causation ("that makes us mere robots"-- their solution is to eliminate First Cause).)Functionally, what's the difference between "choice" and "free will?" If we are able to choose without compulsion, it seems to me that that's the definition of free will. If there is compulsion, it seems to me it is not valid to say we have a choice.
You say that it seems to you if one is under compulsion it is not valid to say one has choice. I suppose we have some agreement as to what comprises compulsion --after all, you do admit, I guess, that we are all influenced by many things. What the matter of compulsion boils down to, in the end, is what Atheists too admit, that we always choose what we want most, every time, even if it is only what we want most for that moment --that split second. And what the Bible says the lost want most is (at least) always in opposition to God. The Regenerated are (at least) free to want what is truly good and pleasing to God. So both are still under compulsion to choose what they most want (for that moment of decision). The lost are slaves to sin, but we are slaves to Christ. And to what one submits oneself, that is one's master (Romans 6). I don't insist you call it choice though I do call it that. You may call it puppetry, but I have yet to hear from anyone a compelling argument as to why choice is not under compulsion. Cause-and-effect rules, after all, and there are no little "First Causes" running about the planet.
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