by jimwalton » Mon Jun 11, 2018 5:00 pm
> But does he ultimately care about free will, or is that just a limitation?
He most certainly does care about our free will.
- Genesis 3: A choice against God will be a tragic choice. Don't use your free will to make the wrong choice!
- Genesis 4.7: "If you do not do what is right, sin is crouching at the door; it desires to have you, but you must master it."
- Genesis 6: Noah had a choice whether to follow God or the ways of the world. Thankfully (v. 22), he chose to do everything as God had commanded.
And so it goes. We could trace this pattern through the whole Bible. God cares greatly about our free will, and reveals Himself to us to influence us in the right direction. He can't force us, or it wouldn't be free will.
> Because one's choice to be evil confronts others' free will, and yet god doesn't stop that.
I've thought about this regarding the issue of tolerance and rights in our society. We have a right to free speech, but if I use my right to free speech to make sure you can't use your right to free speech (if I shout you down), then do I really believe in free speech? If I believe people should have freedom of religion, but your religion tells you to stifle and ultimately kill all people who don't believe in your religion, then where are we? Suppose I tolerate your views, but your view is to silence me? There are obviously thousands of examples, but I hope you catch my drift. So you're asking if one person exercises his free will to suppress another person's free will, shouldn't God use His free will to suppress the suppressor's free will? It tangles quickly, doesn't it, and can become not only self-contradictory but absurd. Instead, God allows people to use their free will, and God is always at work (often behind the scenes) to redeem bad choices, to counsel for good choices, to warn against mistakes, and to make things right after humans screw them up. If God interfered up front, we'd scream "WRONG!" because He would be constantly interfering in people's free will. But if He waits, people scream "WRONG!" because he allows evil. So it's either that you have it in for God no matter what He does—you'll find fault with Him, or we accept that God can't interfere with free will, that He is at work in lives redeeming and advising, and we trust His wisdom. Obviously Christians choose the latter, and atheists choose the former. But certainly God can't be interfering and non-interfering at the same time.
> What do we need to 'build character' for?
Good character is one of the most noble human traits.
> Of course not. Can you? Can god expect me to be convinced of his intentions?
We can only know about God what He chooses to reveal to us. Thankfully we have the Bible as special revelation to show us that I can be confident that God is drawing the lines wisely. And He can expect you (or anyone) to be convinced of his intentions, because we have a 1600-page text to study and learn about his intentions and His activity.
> Again to the free will question: does this condition of ours affect our free will?
Yes. Our environment and our experiences both affect our free will. We are the product of the context and flow of our lives.
> Can I live in a perfect world if I decide to?
No, because free will has its logical parameters. I can't beam myself to Mars just because I will it. I can't pass through a solid wall like a ghost just because I will it. Nor can I live in a perfect world if I decide to.
> Can god let me live in the perfect conditions he made for us, and then he will see if I'll have the same behavior as Eve and be deserving of the consequences?
That ship has sailed. But the door is always open for you (or anyone) to return to God, to become part of His family, to share His life and to have a relationship with Him. That offer stands even today. The choice you have is essentially the same as hers: will you insist on being autonomous and seek wisdom outside of God, or will you trust His wisdom and be found in Him? And the consequences for you are the same as for her: to align with God is the path to life, and to rebel against Him is the path to death. It's not that God has decided that, but it's the only game on the table. God is life, so to join Him is to have life. To reject Him can only lead in one direction—to death. You get to choose your path and the consequences that go with it.
> Are we dools with a purpose for our fabricator, or are we people with our own aspirations? One can decide to do as another one wants, but that should be as valid as my choice to have my own intentions in life.
You were created for a purpose. We do the same thing. We create doors to be doors, cars to be cars, and computers to compute. You can try to use a door to drive to Chicago, and good luck with that. Objects are designed for a purpose. You were designed to be a child of God. Within that purpose, you could have aspirations for science, business, art, music, law, philosophy, or a thousand other things. God doesn't limit your aspirations, He just created you to find completion in Him. In Him you are free. You bind yourself to this relationship (not a whole lot unlike marriage, as an analogy), and they you are free to pursue your own intentions in life within the ballpark of that relationship.