Bouke285
It's not a sin to be wrong, but be wrong humbly!
Interesting question. I don't think heaven would be heaven without freedom. He gives us freedom because He loves us. And from what I understand about heaven, we will be united with God and we will be completely fulfilled, doing exactly what we were created for. In that situation, I cannot imagine that anyone would want to reject God.
Very true.
In response to your earlier question about how Satan "learned" evil... I don't think evil is something that needs to be learned. It's simply what happens when something becomes spoiled, when we go against our nature. When we decide "I will serve God first and foremost," that is good. When we decide "I will serve myself first and foremost," that is evil. It's against out nature; we were created to love and serve God.
In our resurrected state there will have to be a change brought over us, whether it be something directly done by God, or just by being in the fullness of his presence, we will change. This won't be by our will, we have no hope to make ourselves perfect.
Why do so many people link God being God with our ability to freely choose him of our own accord? This is not biblical. We can never be credited with doing something to earn our place with God. Why could one person believe and another not believe? If someone in heaven came up and asked you "Why are you here, and not that other guy?" you will only be able to answer, "I don't know"
We were created for God's glorification. He knew from the beginning we would fall. He knew that He would come to redeem us. God isn't ever surprised. Adam was in that situation and he chose to sin against God, all it took was one small hint of evil. God destroying the source of evil would be directly altering our ability to freely choose to do good or evil. And yet, many people have a problem with this idea. God is a God who counts our internal freedom higher than his own glory? No. We can't go against our nature within ourself, it must be caused by something external. At death we are separated from our sin nature, and at our resurrection we will be like Adam before the fall, with no desire to sin, but now we will be without the external source of evil, Satan.
If Satan didn't learn evil, but God gave him the ability to do evil wouldn't God be the indirect author of evil? For if anything comes, apart from God, directly or indirectly then God couldn't be all powerful. God willed his plan be complete in Christ's death. The means by which Christ redeemed humanity was by the sin of humanity. This was God's will, could Pilot have turned against it? Was there any other way Christ could have satisfied the righteousness of the Father than by the means He planned before time? No.
So, I don't think God is basically saying "Refuse to worship me? Fine, I'll punish you!" I think Hell is what we experience when we choose to be permanently cut off from our Creator. And that is what people are choosing when they reject God. I think if people really understood this, they wouldn't choose to be apart from Him. But when you love and respect someone, as God does with us, you honor their choices.
Why would God have any respect for us? Utter blasphemous rebels defying the very purpose for which we were created. Even at birth we are at enmity. People have an idea that God won't be present in Hell, but there is no grounds for this thought. God is everywhere, all the time. It may be because of His presence that Hell is Hell.
I have a lot of respect for C.S. Lewis. Though he didn't use the modern lingo of the reformation, Lewis did understand our place in God's plan. He understood that every person alive deserves Hell, and there is absolutely NOTHING we can do to change that. No amount of goodness will clean you from sin. It is only because God chooses some undeserving that any desire him. We choose him because he makes himself our greatest desire, that's how those who believe go against their nature and believe. God never needed us, we don't have anything on him. There would be nothing unjust if he were to send us all into eternal judgement. Only by believing in Christ's marvelous grace, his atoning death, his sacrifice to the Father's righteous judgement for our sakes, are we reconciled. That is love.
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