by jimwalton » Wed Mar 30, 2016 7:43 pm
You seem to be working real hard here to prove something unreasonable, and I'm still not sure what it is. "Methinks thou protests too much." But let me deal with your last paragraph. Maybe that's where I should expend my efforts.
> God knows everything and can do anything.
Wrong. It doesn’t mean there are no limits to what God can do. It means God is able to do all things that are proper objects of his power. It is no contradiction that God can realize whatever is possible, but that no number of actualized possibilities exhausts his power. God can realize whatever is possible. There are, however, certain qualifications of this all-powerful character of God. He cannot arbitrarily do anything whatsoever that we may conceive of.
- He can’t do what is logically absurd or contradictory
- He can’t act contrary to his nature
- He cannot fail to do what he has promised
- The theology of omnipotence rejects the possibility of dualism
- He cannot interfere with the freedom of man
- He cannot change the past
- It is not violated by self-limitation on the part of God
- It does not imply the use of all the power of God
> God chose to create a world knowing that I would be born into particular circumstances with a particular brain.
Right. And this dynamical world God created is far superior to the alternative of a static world.
> God knows that in these circumstances I will honestly reach the wrong answer about his existence.
Right. Though He has given you enough information for you to make the correct choice, and continues (within that dynamical framework) to persuade you, it is within your control, and your control only, to make the right choice.
> He could have chosen to create a world where I had a different brain that allowed me to reach the correct conclusion.
Wrong. A world of you having a different kind of brain that only allowed you to make right conclusions is not within His scope to do. It is a self-contradictory world where choice is necessary but impossible.
> But he chose this world, and as a result he will punish me in the afterlife for something that he chose.
Wrong. He will punish you in the afterlife for what you choose. He is continually giving you right information to make the correct decision. Even your many many conversations with me could easily be construed as God making his appeal to you through me: Come to God. Acknowledge the truth. Stop pushing against all of God's input, and submit to His call to you. But if you choose to continue to rebel and resist, He is not to blame. Your brain has the capacity (since that was one of your questions) to acknowledge Him. You are not convinced, obviously, and are choosing a path of your own making. You will only be punished in the afterlife for what you have chosen.
Last bumped by Anonymous on Wed Mar 30, 2016 7:43 pm.