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Will Humans Have Freewill in Heaven?
#41
RE: Will Humans Have Freewill in Heaven?
Here's a response to that question by apologist Matt Slick: 

https://carm.org/about-God-freewill-heaven

I'll sum up the comments here: 

Quote:We can understand certain things about God from nature. All that we see was created in time. It is dependent upon something else for its existence. But there cannot be an endless regression of causes for existence, so there must be a self-existing Being upon which all existence depends. This is God, of course.  

Wrong, just because something was caused (in this case the big bang) does not mean that it correlates to a god. In fact, we don't know what caused it. This is based on the Kalam Cosmological Argument which simply attempts to smuggle a god into the first premise by saying everything that begins to exist has a cause. It's an ad hoc design attempting to smooth over previously poorly worded arguments, or in other words, provide a loophole for the theist. 

Let's look at more of MS comments on this: 

Quote:Now, since God is fully actualized (He is the same from all eternity), it is impossible that He could violate His own nature (sin).  But man is not like God in this sense; man can change.  For God, freedom is having the power to do that which pleases Him, and it is impossible for Him to do otherwise because of His nature. Not so with created things. Humans can actually choose evil without it being contrary to reason. So, we can't have free will while being guaranteed not to sin, "modeled after the characteristics of the Trinity," as you say.

What if God put His creation in heaven to begin with? He did, and the angels fell (Rev. 12:9,Luke 10:18). They fell because they became obsessed with their own beauty and power rather than the ultimate power that they were made to know. Likewise, Adam wanted to "be like God" and decide his own fate ().

So, why couldn't God make man in a way that it would be certain that he would have freedom but not rebel? Such a state of affairs may indeed have been impossible. Again, it would not be possible for man's freedom to be the same as God's, as I described earlier. Man has the potential for pride, to look to himself rather than God for fulfillment. As long as that is true, he has the possibility of sinning.

What about in heaven? Isn't it true that in heaven people have freedom but do not sin? Yes, but people in heaven have knowledge of sin that Adam did not have before he fell. In heaven, the redeemed will be able to fully know the contrast between God's goodness and the horrendous effects of evil. With glorified minds and bodies, they cannot possibly choose evil. Could God have given man that knowledge beforehand? God did give Adam the warning (), but mental knowledge is different from experiential knowledge. Having experienced the full effects of sin and the presence of God, one will not decide to turn back to sin.

I understand what he is attempting to say here but it's beside the point. According to the bible god does violate his own nature in countless stories by changing his mind. He is often shown to change his mind after some convincing arguments from biblical characters. Does this constitute a change in nature? (I'm assuming our *nature* is referred to as a noun which would mean the fundamental qualities of a person or thing; identity or essential character.) A theist would say no but I would argue that it would. If I am ready to kill someone and a friend convinces me not to based on some form of reasoning, in essence, my nature has become slightly more empathetic or compassionate, if only for that moment. It may have been that he convinced me the outcome would actually hurt me more (jail time) or it could be something else altogether. Nevertheless a changing of the mind to do something designates a change in how we think / react which is directly correlated to our characteristics or nature.

There is absolutely no evidence that god put his creation in heaven to begin with. We know what the ancients thought *heaven* was and where it was. We know that the story in Isaiah 14 tells about how Lucifer fell, etc. We also know that This is purely speculative. However, if we grant this point based on the story of it is more probable that this passage is an allusion to a Canaanite or Phoenician myth about how Helel, son of the god Shahar, sought the throne of the chief god and was cast down into the abyss because of this. Evidence for this theory comes from an Ugaritic poem about two divine children, Shachar (dawn) and Shalim (dusk), who were born as the result of the intercourse of the god El with mortal women. That would make El, Elyon, and Shahar members of the Canaanite pantheon and the “mount of meeting” is the abode of the gods, which corresponds to Mount Olympus in Greek mythology. Unfortunately, this is just speculation as archaeologists have not uncovered any Canaanite sources that describe Helel ben Shahar or a revolt against Elyon.

Many Apocalyptic writers interpreted this passage as referring to Lucifer, and wrote about the fall of the angels1 Enoch refers to the falling angels as stars (the watches) and may be the beginning of the overlap between the story of the watchers and Isaiah. The point is many religions had their own version of this story of "the fall", Egypt, Babylon, etc. so just because there is a story of a 'fall' does not mean that it is true. 

To address the last point: So, why couldn't god make man in a way that it would be certain that he would have freedom but not rebel? Impossibility Slick proposes? I thought all things were possible with god? The fact that they have the knowledge of the alleged effects of sin in no way bears that they would not decide to do evil in heaven. People on earth decide to perform actions we label as evil every day with full knowledge of the potential consequences of those actions. They still choose to do them. Invoking a glorified mind or body that the heavenly residents will have does not work either. Lucifer was a created being, and he still chose to think himself higher than god (as the story goes) If one argues (as Matt does) that he did not know the effects his decision would have then how can he be held accountable? It's the same with Adam & Eve. If they did not have the knowledge of good and evil then how can they be held accountable for a good / evil action? What kind of god would dole out consequences to someone who didn't know what his/her actions would bring? It all kind of seems circular to me. 

Quote:In His wisdom, God sees it best to give man what he wants without fully knowing the consequences beforehand. Perhaps this way honors human dignity and gives Him the opportunity to express His great mercy and love. We can more fully understand God's love and His conquering power in light of a history marred by sin. We do not know fully why God does as He does, but we know He is good (how we know that must be accounted for elsewhere). This is obviously not the best possible world, but, as my mentor Norman Geisler has often said, it may be "the best possible way to the best possible world."

As for your final objection, that a rule exists which God does not decree: the laws governing existence are not from outside of God, nor are they merely decreed arbitrarily as you suggest. They derive from God's very nature. Order and logic are derived from God's Being. A state of affairs in which man has freedom and yet cannot sin is contrary to reason, as I have argued here. And reason is from God, not from outside of Him. So, there is no obligation on God from the outside. He is  and in His sovereignty, He has allowed evil, which He will ultimately use for His glory and for our good.

god honors human dignity by giving man what he wants without man knowing the consequences just so he can show love and mercy? What kind of fucked up reasoning is that? If I chose to send my child down into a dungeon in my basement because he did something wrong....and he did not know it was wrong because he had no knowledge of this concept....just so I could say, I love you and want to show you mercy so I'm going to let you come back upstairs; there is not a single person in his/her right mind that would think this wasn't insanely crazy. I could have easily shown him love by just LOVING him. I don't need to exercise a warrant of suffering just to show my love. And I can sure think of a better system that I could put in place to where mercy would not need to be shown. Showing the nature of mercy does not justify suffering in the slightest of means. And if it does, I would want nothing to do with that epistemology. 

So the dilemma still stands and cannot cohesively be negated regardless of the mental gymnastics and hoops theists try to jump through.
**Crickets** -- God
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#42
RE: Will Humans Have Freewill in Heaven?
(July 7, 2015 at 1:14 pm)Randy Carson Wrote:
(July 7, 2015 at 12:15 pm)Crossless1 Wrote: What fun!  The OP poses a question that one might think could be answered clearly and unequivocally based on Yahweh's "inspired" Word, and what do we get?  A Catholic linking to an article that says that, yes, we will have free will in Heaven (but choose not to rebel) and a Protestant who says that, no, we do not have free will in Heaven or on Earth.

Who knew that childish fantasies could be so hard to understand?

There is no need to pay much attention to Protestantism. It's just another heresy.

Oh, no fear, Randy.  I don't take Protestants any more seriously than I do Catholics.
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#43
RE: Will Humans Have Freewill in Heaven?
(July 7, 2015 at 1:14 pm)Randy Carson Wrote:
(July 7, 2015 at 12:15 pm)Crossless1 Wrote: What fun!  The OP poses a question that one might think could be answered clearly and unequivocally based on Yahweh's "inspired" Word, and what do we get?  A Catholic linking to an article that says that, yes, we will have free will in Heaven (but choose not to rebel) and a Protestant who says that, no, we do not have free will in Heaven or on Earth.

Who knew that childish fantasies could be so hard to understand?

There is no need to pay much attention to Protestantism. It's just another heresy.

[Image: BvV5yLxCEAIps0E.jpg]
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#44
RE: Will Humans Have Freewill in Heaven?
(July 7, 2015 at 11:27 am)robvalue Wrote:
(July 7, 2015 at 10:05 am)Rhondazvous Wrote: And wet too? Pobre cito.

Didn't you say somewhere you have a wife? And Stim thins having a woman will answer his problems. Somebody ought to tell him the truth.

Yeah I have a wife Smile She says to me, "Do they think you're a real person on that forum?" I say, "Yeah, I think so!"

She is absolutely wonderful and my flannelings would be missing their insides without her.
If you weren't a real person, I might think I was talking to god and then the men in the long white coats would come and put me away somewhere.

That is great to have someone who's on your side like that. You must be doing something right.
The god who allows children to be raped out of respect for the free will choice of the rapist, but punishes gay men for engaging in mutually consensual sex couldn't possibly be responsible for an intelligently designed universe.

I may defend your right to free speech, but i won't help you pass out flyers.

Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities.
--Voltaire

Nietzsche isn't dead. How do I know he lives? He lives in my mind.
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#45
RE: Will Humans Have Freewill in Heaven?
Thank you Smile I am a very lucky guy.

By real person she means a proper member of society rather than a funny little creature scurrying around with no idea what he's doing Wink Jury is still out on that one.
Feel free to send me a private message.
Please visit my website here! It's got lots of information about atheism/theism and support for new atheists.

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#46
RE: Will Humans Have Freewill in Heaven?
(July 7, 2015 at 12:29 pm)Drich Wrote: What makes you think we had free will in the Garden?

So all those Christians who say the reason god allows suffering and sin is so we can have free will, they're all wrong, right? Let them define freewill since they're the ones who use it as an answer, or try to anyway.

Atheist don't have to make lists of Bible contradictions. All we have to do is listen to a bunch of Christians explaining the Bible.
The god who allows children to be raped out of respect for the free will choice of the rapist, but punishes gay men for engaging in mutually consensual sex couldn't possibly be responsible for an intelligently designed universe.

I may defend your right to free speech, but i won't help you pass out flyers.

Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities.
--Voltaire

Nietzsche isn't dead. How do I know he lives? He lives in my mind.
Reply
#47
RE: Will Humans Have Freewill in Heaven?
(July 7, 2015 at 3:59 pm)Rhondazvous Wrote:
(July 7, 2015 at 12:29 pm)Drich Wrote: What makes you think we had free will in the Garden?

So all those Christians who say the reason god allows suffering and sin is so we can have free will, they're all wrong, right? Let them define freewill since they're the ones who use it as an answer, or try to anyway.

Atheist don't have to make lists of Bible contradictions.  All we have to do is listen to a bunch of Christians explaining the Bible.

So you believe in 'free will' because others do, even when the bible says our will is not our own? That we are slaves to sin.. Why? Is everything you believe based on popular thought? Do you not independently verify anything? If enough people were fanatical about the earth being flat, would you believe it? Would you ever believe it was ok to kill a baby if you simply reidentified it with a latin word instead of an English one?

Again look it up the concept of free will. If you do you will see it is a greek philosophy concept and not a biblical one (meaning 2000 year old concept rather than a 5 to 7thousand year old concept.) Not to mention No where in the bible is free will ever mentioned.

At best well meaning people take this greek philosophy and mislabel aspects of the bible and call it 'free will'. For instance the singular choice Adam and Eve had in the garden.

Is having only the one choice (eat the forbidden fruit or not) follow any definition of 'free will?' Giving a person only one choice is pushing them down a predestined path. That is the oppsite of free will. again if you look at the definition of free will having only one choice does not follow our understanding of the word.

To have free will means to make choices outside of any predestined path. and only being given one choice means in the garden they did not have free will.
Adam and Eve simply had been given the freedom to make a single choice. This same choice is given to each of us on an indivisual bases to make. That one choice is to follow God or not. One free choice is not free will. slaves were often given many choices to make on their own, but it does not make their will their own either. Here we only have one.

So now you might ask why do bad thing happen in this life? For the same reason the doctrine of 'free will' states without the 'free will'. Because Adam eve and their offspring were all cast outside the garden where they were made to live a 'fallen' life, away from God's direct grace and His protection, because of their sin. Sin has consenquences, and being separated from God because of sin, means being separated from His glory and all He offers.
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#48
RE: Will Humans Have Freewill in Heaven?
(July 7, 2015 at 4:49 pm)Drich Wrote:
(July 7, 2015 at 3:59 pm)Rhondazvous Wrote: So all those Christians who say the reason god allows suffering and sin is so we can have free will, they're all wrong, right? Let them define freewill since they're the ones who use it as an answer, or try to anyway.

Atheist don't have to make lists of Bible contradictions.  All we have to do is listen to a bunch of Christians explaining the Bible.

So you believe in 'free will' because others do, even when the bible says our will is not our own? That we are slaves to sin.. Why? Is everything you believe based on popular thought? Do you not independently verify anything? If enough people were fanatical about the earth being flat, would you believe it? Would you ever believe it was ok to kill a baby if you simply reidentified it with a latin word instead of an English one?

Again look it up the concept of free will. If you do you will see it is a greek philosophy concept and not a biblical one (meaning 2000 year old concept rather than a 5 to 7thousand year old concept.) Not to mention No where in the bible is free will ever mentioned.

At best well meaning people take this greek philosophy and mislabel aspects of the bible and call it 'free will'. For instance the singular choice Adam and Eve had in the garden.

Is having only the one choice (eat the forbidden fruit or not) follow any definition of 'free will?' Giving a person only one choice is pushing them down a predestined path. That is the oppsite of free will. again if you look at the definition of free will having only one choice does not follow our understanding of the word.

To have free will means to make choices outside of any predestined path. and only being given one choice means in the garden they did not have free will.
Adam and Eve simply had been given the freedom to make a single choice. This same choice is given to each of us on an indivisual bases to make. That one choice is to follow God or not. One free choice is not free will. slaves were often given many choices to make on their own, but it does not make their will their own either. Here we only have one.

So now you might ask why do bad thing happen in this life? For the same reason the doctrine of 'free will' states without the 'free will'. Because Adam eve and their offspring were all cast outside the garden where they were made to live a 'fallen' life, away from God's direct grace and His protection, because of their sin. Sin has consenquences, and being separated from God because of sin, means being separated from His glory and all He offers.

Before there was anything called philosophy, religious accounts of man's fate explored the degree of human freedom permitted by superhuman gods. Creation myths often end in adventures of the first humans clearly making choices and being held responsible. But a strong fatalism is present in those tales that foretell the future, based on the idea that the gods have foreknowledge of future events. The myth-makers rarely challenge the implausible view that the gods' foreknowledge is compatible with human freedom. This was an early form of the idea that causal determinism and logical necessity are compatible with free will. 

Sure greek philosophers may have actually teased out the concepts but those concepts were in place well before. The bible and other holy books don't have to actually mention the words free will. 

Quote:To have free will means to make choices outside of any predestined path.
 

I don't agree with free will. If we have anything, I think it is illusory at best. It sounds like you may come to the same conclusions but just under a different context.
**Crickets** -- God
Reply
#49
RE: Will Humans Have Freewill in Heaven?
(July 7, 2015 at 4:49 pm)Drich Wrote: So you believe in 'free will' because others do, even when the bible says our will is not our own? That we are slaves to sin.. Why? Is everything you believe based on popular thought? Do you not independently verify anything? If enough people were fanatical about the earth being flat, would you believe it? Would you ever believe it was ok to kill a baby if you simply reidentified it with a latin word instead of an English one?

...I was going to reply, but you're so wrong it's not even worth it.
The god who allows children to be raped out of respect for the free will choice of the rapist, but punishes gay men for engaging in mutually consensual sex couldn't possibly be responsible for an intelligently designed universe.

I may defend your right to free speech, but i won't help you pass out flyers.

Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities.
--Voltaire

Nietzsche isn't dead. How do I know he lives? He lives in my mind.
Reply
#50
RE: Will Humans Have Freewill in Heaven?
Dritch is in the unenviable position of understanding that freewill cannot exist in the presence of an all-knowing, omnipotent god, but having to believe that humans are responsible for their sin and deserve to go to hell for it.

No human brain can house such contradictory beliefs without going batty.

History has shown us that we do have limited freewill. Our actions are based on emotions, not logic. We have drives and urges and the limitations of our physical bodies. Still, we aren't all instinct. There is a part of us that can stand back and decide whether to follow our drives and urges. Once we learn that we can do this, our actions will be based more and logic and we will have more freewill than those who just do what comes naturally. This is easier said than done, but, to varying degrees, we do have some control and are not slaves to anything we don't wish to be.
The god who allows children to be raped out of respect for the free will choice of the rapist, but punishes gay men for engaging in mutually consensual sex couldn't possibly be responsible for an intelligently designed universe.

I may defend your right to free speech, but i won't help you pass out flyers.

Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities.
--Voltaire

Nietzsche isn't dead. How do I know he lives? He lives in my mind.
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