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How to Understand the Trinity

Re: How does the Trinity exist outside the universe?

Postby Book Mitten » Thu Feb 13, 2020 10:49 am

> God has not designed it all. Jer. 18.1-12 is one of many clear places to explain that. Losers can win, winners can lose, the first might end up last and the last can be first.

A few problems with the passage cited. One is the comparison of a non concious material object, clay pottery, with living beings. Religions like Christianity are often seen as antithetical to the values of vulgar consumerism/materialism/virus-like mentality, but I don't agree. I think that many fundamentalist values are in fact in complete agreement, at times, with those values. Passages such as that cited are an example, along with a similar theme of pottery in Romans, and the passage about a winnowing fork and burning chaff with unquenchable fire in the gospel of Matthew.

Another issue is that God has both complete creative power and in addition knowledge of what he is creating. (Even in open theism he has some knowledge). As such, he is likely to have more foresight than a human potter working within only limited knowledge, albeit knowledge nonetheless.

Thirdly, there are other methods of reversing an evil state of affairs than destruction and suffering. Even if you were to claim that a wrongdoer should not get away with evil, they had an inclination in the first place. That inclination did not occur in a vacuum. Do seemingly innocent victims of murder and natural disaster deserve what happens to them? Are these events part of a narrative that God shapes in accordance with reversing an imbalance or issue such as that alluded to in Jeremiah?
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Re: How does the Trinity exist outside the universe?

Postby jimwalton » Thu Feb 13, 2020 11:16 am

> A few problems with the passage cited. One is the comparison of a non concious material object, clay pottery, with living beings.

Sure, I get that, but the point of the analogy is conditionality, which carries over both categories. Just as the potter improvises his design based on the condition of the clay, so the Lord improvises according to people's responses. It's also true of farmers working the land; they make adjustments based on soil conditions. And therefore the point is that all is not deterministically designed in an immutable flow. The condition of the objects have a role in how situations play out.

> God has both complete creative power and in addition knowledge of what he is creating.

Indisputable. But what if God creates a being who also has creative power and knows what he is creating (beings such as humans with our creativity, knowledge, and imagination)?

> As such, he is likely to have more foresight than a human potter working within only limited knowledge, albeit knowledge nonetheless.

Of course God does have more foresight than a human. By making room for human response, God doesn't compromise his omniscience, sovereignty, or immutability. Since God is able to see because all time for Him is "present," He can accommodate choice without determining choice. He has granted free will to humans, and so has made room for legitimate response to circumstances and vagaries of human will. This relational flexibility is a corollary of His immutability, which encompasses His just and compassionate nature. The allowance of contingency doesn't diminish God's sovereignty. The interplay between a sovereign God and creature to whom he has granted a degree of freedom can result in contingent statements of divine intention being altered or unrealized.

> there are other methods of reversing an evil state of affairs than destruction and suffering.

How can you be so sure?

The world is in fear right now of the corona virus. We have a limited number of choices as to how to reverse this state of affairs: (1) destroy the virus—find a way to kill it to stop it; (2) mutate the virus to render it innocuous; (3) protect against it (vaccination). Those are our choices.

So, if evil is a particular state of affairs with distinct properties, deficits and benefits, as we have discussed, there are perhaps very few choices as to how to effectively reverse it.

But I feel we have strayed to the side. According to biblical theology, evil can't be reversed, any more than death can be removed from biology. Once it's in the system, it's in, and it has to be dealt with appropriately; it can't be reversed. Again, there are limited options as to how it can be dealt with. We can't just say "Shazzam" and make it disappear. This isn't magic and sleight of hand but rather reality.

> That inclination did not occur in a vacuum.

Of course not. Agreed.

> Do seemingly innocent victims of murder and natural disaster deserve what happens to them?

Generally no, though at times they play a part. A person walking alone on a dark street in a dangerous part of town is not totally faultless for inviting crime; so also a person who builds a house on a tectonic fault line can't be held cleanly blameless when the earthquake destroys their home. That doesn't mean they deserve what happened to them, but they are to some extent complicit in the result.

> Are these events part of a narrative that God shapes in accordance with reversing an imbalance or issue such as that alluded to in Jeremiah?

I would say no, these are not to what Jeremiah is referring.
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Re: How does the Trinity exist outside the universe?

Postby Book Mitten » Tue Feb 18, 2020 12:15 pm

> That doesn't mean they deserve what happened to them, but they are to some extent complicit in the result.

They still don't deserve it though.

> I would say no, these are not to what Jeremiah is referring.

Could you expand?

> We can't just say "Shazzam" and make it disappear. This isn't magic and sleight of hand but rather reality.

We can't, but God could make a killer who intends to kill again disappear.

> Indisputable. But what if God creates a being who also has creative power and knows what he is creating (beings such as humans with our creativity, knowledge, and imagination)?

Creative power doesn't necessarily mean free will. Electricity has creative power in a sense as it creates light (if used correctly).

I of course recognize my electricity analogy is itself limited, but what I'm trying to demonstrate is that I believe that inner will and power exist; they just don't necessarily mean "free will" exists.
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Re: How does the Trinity exist outside the universe?

Postby jimwalton » Tue Feb 18, 2020 12:43 pm

> They still don't deserve it though.

In this analogy, it's probably safe to say they didn't deserve it, though we'd have to specify what is meant by "deserve." If someone intentionally walks alone in a knowingly dangerous part of town at a knowingly dangerous time of day (viz., night), "deserve" may not pertain to a moral condition but rather to a volitional one.

>> I would say no, these are not to what Jeremiah is referring.
> Could you expand?

There is no evidence in the text that God is shaping the narrative to His predetermined direction. It's true that God is working to rebalance an imbalance, but the thrust of the text is precisely the part that people play in shaping the narrative—that it is not set in stone by an unresponsive God. When God says in Jer. 18.6 basically "I can do as I wish," He explains that to mean that He is free to respond to the responses of humans—that if He warns them and they change course, then He also can change course. He has a right to act as He wishes in response to human decisions.

> We can't, but God could make a killer who intends to kill again disappear.

No He can't. There is a thing called "reality" of which God is a part. "Omnipotence" doesn't mean that God can do anything willy-nilly, against reality and even self-contradictory (which is not the case here). People have lives; they are souls; they are real. God can't just wave a silly finger and make them disappear like a magician on a stage. Their reality has to be dealt with in reality with real actions.

> Creative power doesn't necessarily mean free will. Electricity has creative power in a sense as it creates light (if used correctly).

I disagree, and I also reject your illustration of electricity, which has no consciousness. The electricity has no volition or any cognizant "power," but displays only potential and kinetic energy. It is idle until there is a stimulus to which it gives a response. Without the stimulus, it can never "decide" in any sense of the word.

> I believe that inner will and power exist; they just don't necessarily mean "free will" exists.

What is "inner will and power" if not free will?
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Re: How does the Trinity exist outside the universe?

Postby Book Mitten » Tue Feb 18, 2020 5:30 pm

> I also reject your illustration of electricity, which has no consciousness.

Consciousness is just another characteristic. I can't choose to not be conscious, and I can't choose what I'm conscious of. I can make decisions within my consciousness, but just as you think God can't do things "willy nilly", I can't either. Which leads us to our next point.

> People have lives; they are souls; they are real. God can't just wave a silly finger and make them disappear like a magician on a stage. Their reality has to be dealt with in reality with real actions.

How does God making them disappear not constitute a real action? If he created them without precedent, surely he can also extinguish them?

> There is no evidence in the text that God is shaping the narrative to His predetermined direction. It's true that God is working to rebalance an imbalance, but the thrust of the text is precisely the part that people play in shaping the narrative—that it is not set in stone by an unresponsive God. When God says in Jer. 18.6 basically "I can do as I wish," He explains that to mean that He is free to respond to the responses of humans—that if He warns them and they change course, then He also can change course. He has a right to act as He wishes in response to human decisions.

Surely he would know the nature of what he is creating and thus be more aware than us what path we are going down? He would also know what would make us respond in a particular way: for example, if I was to do something wrong but which I thought was right, I would respond by not doing the wrong action if God showed me evidence of it being bad.

> What is "inner will and power" if not free will?

Influence and direction. Another example is the Sun. It has power and influence over the nature of our world, without having free will.
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Re: How does the Trinity exist outside the universe?

Postby jimwalton » Tue Feb 18, 2020 5:47 pm

> Consciousness is just another characteristic.

I disagree. Trees have limbs, and I have limbs—those are characteristics. But a tree doesn't have consciousness. That's an attribute of my nature. I would still be human without limbs; I would not still be human without consciousness.

> I can't choose to not be conscious, and I can't choose what I'm conscious of.

Correct, because consciousness is a necessary attribute. Nor can you choose whether or not to think. Nor can you choose to transport yourself to the rings of Saturn. These immutables don't mean you have no free will, or that you're somewhat the same as a tree.

> just as you think God can't do things "willy nilly", I can't either.

Correct. We can only do things that are proper objects of our power.

> How does God making them disappear not constitute a real action?

Oh, it's a real action, but that's not what I said. What I said is that He can't defy reality. Once humans are born, according to the Scriptures, we exist a souls that continue on past this life. For God to make a human disappear would be an repudiation of that reality, and therefore such an action is contrary to fact and not possible.

> If he created them without precedent, surely he can also extinguish them?

Lives can be ended so that they transition to death, but they cannot be magically extinguished *in nihilo*.

> Surely he would know the nature of what he is creating and thus be more aware than us what path we are going down?

Yes, certainly.

> He would also know what would make us respond in a particular way: for example, if I was to do something wrong but which I thought was right, I would respond by not doing the wrong action if God showed me evidence of it being bad.

I disagree. I have shown my kids evidence of things being bad, and they weren't dissuaded one bit: down the wrong path they chose to go. I can plead, show love, show evidence, reason, and even pressure. Nope. They choose what they want.

There just may be nothing more He can do to motivate us to love Him. I was just listening to Bonnie Raitt yesterday: "I can't make you love me if you don't; I can't make your heart feel something it won't." With God it's not about religion, it's about love.

> Influence and direction. Another example is the Sun. It has power and influence over the nature of our world, without having free will.

We obviously have very different definitions of free will. I know free will is pretty tough to define without allowing any loopholes. I can only sort of describe its characteristics and its necessity. It's the modulation of ongoing action, the distinguishing of potential courses, the ability to reason, the exercise of autonomy, and the consequent self-direction of thought and behavior. Those have nothing to do with electricity or the Sun.
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Re: How does the Trinity exist outside the universe?

Postby Book Mitten » Mon Feb 24, 2020 10:24 am

> It's the modulation of ongoing action

Animals have that. I haven't heard Christians describe the animal kingdom as having free will.

> the distinguishing of potential courses,

Computers can distinguish courses in making calculations. It doesn't mean they have free will.

> the ability to reason

Reason for me inhibits my ability to do things I consider completely unreasonable, such as causing unnecessary harm or breaking something valuable. As such reason actually detracts from free will in this way.

> the exercise of autonomy

Autonomy is often defined as freedom, independence, and uncoerced decisions. I think all these things can exist without free will. I would in fact argue that a God might be more coercive in threatening people with hellfire. There is also a difference between coercing people, as a Mafia syndicate might do, and being compelled, which can simply be a case of one thing leading to another, with no infringement upon being.

> and the consequent self-direction of thought and behavior.

The only way I can direct any of my thoughts is through the existence of another thought. Without that thought influencing the mix, things would be different. The thought cannot freely will itself however. It simply is.
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Re: How does the Trinity exist outside the universe?

Postby jimwalton » Mon Feb 24, 2020 10:32 am

> Animals have that. I haven't heard Christians describe the animal kingdom as having free will.

I would readily admit that animals have free will. Have you every tried to get your shoe away from a dog?

> Computers can distinguish courses in making calculations. It doesn't mean they have free will

Correct.

> Reason for me inhibits my ability to do things I consider completely unreasonable, such as causing unnecessary harm or breaking something valuable. As such reason actually detracts from free will in this way.

That's one angle, yes. There are many other aspects to reason, however, that contribute to free will.

> Autonomy is often defined as freedom, independence, and uncoerced decisions. I think all these things can exist without free will.

An uncoerced decision arises from an independent source that, while considering environment and cause-and-effect, is a first cause of the action at hand.

> I would in fact argue that a God might be more coercive in threatening people with hellfire.

Threats of and warnings about reality are meant to be compelling, not coercive. To make wise decisions, one needs as much information as possible, and it's helpful to have the negative as well as positive consequences in hand.

> There is also a difference between coercing people, as a Mafia syndicate might do, and being compelled, which can simply be a case of one thing leading to another, with no infringement upon being.

Correct. That's why God does not coerce, though we know of one case (Jonah) where his guidance was very heavy-handed.

> The only way I can direct any of my thoughts is through the existence of another thought

How do you know this? What evidence do you have?
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Re: How does the Trinity exist outside the universe?

Postby Book Mitten » Sun Mar 01, 2020 4:31 pm

> How do you know this? What evidence do you have?

My experience. Think about your own experience as well. What directs your thoughts if not another thought that you should do so?

> Threats of and warnings about reality are meant to be compelling, not coercive.

That's not what I'm talking about. Hell is not a pre-existing reality. It's a place God has created and threatened people with. That's coercion, and a worse form than mafia I will add.

> That's one angle, yes. There are many other aspects to reason, however, that contribute to free will.

I'm listening. Could you give an example?

> I would readily admit that animals have free will. Have you every tried to get your shoe away from a dog?

That's an example of will, not free will. Have you ever told said dog that it could choose to not want the shoe?

> An uncoerced decision arises from an independent source that, while considering environment and cause-and-effect, is a first cause of the action at hand.

Like I was saying earlier, something can be a first cause without having free will.
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Re: How does the Trinity exist outside the universe?

Postby jimwalton » Sun Mar 01, 2020 4:36 pm

> What directs your thoughts if not another thought that you should do so?

Sometimes my thoughts are new, not arising from a previous thought. That's my experience.

> Hell is not a pre-existing reality.

Correct.

> It's a place God has created and threatened people with.

God created it, yes, but not for people (Mt. 25.41). I wouldn't say God threatens people with hell. He's just forthright about its reality and the that people will go there if they don't repent.

If I were to inform you that a tornado was headed your way and unless you took certain actions you would surely be killed, that's not a threat. It's rather a warning about real consequences based on real behavior. I would say a threat is a power play, a warning is an expression of truth or compassion or both.

> That's coercion, and a worse form than mafia I will add.

I don't perceive it as coercion because he's just telling the truth about the reality of what lies ahead. If I stop your car on the highway and tell you the bridge is out and you need to turn around, that's not mafia-coercion, it's responsible information.

> That's an example of will, not free will. Have you ever told said dog that it could choose to not want the shoe?

So the dog is not freely deciding which direction to veer to avoid me?

> something can be a first cause without having free will.

Yeah, we don't agree on this.
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