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Re: The Contradiction
[Re: Mountain Man]
#85356
02/12/07 11:05 PM
02/12/07 11:05 PM
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SDA Charter Member Active Member 2019
20000+ Member
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Joined: Oct 2000
Posts: 22,256
Southwest USA
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TE: She speaks of the stone never being rolled away from the tomb, as I recall.
MM: Divinity cannot die. Deity did not die. Are you suggesting Sister White said if Jesus had failed He would have remained in the tomb for eternity?
TE: The question of whether the fact that an event A must happen implies that must do A does not require a discussion of God's foreknowledge.
MM: What is the context of “A”? Does it represent what will happen in the future? If so, then what does “B” have to do with it?
TE: How is my saying that you say that only A can occur misrepresenting your view? It's just what you said!
MM: That’s not what I believe. Again, just because “A” happens, it does not mean “B” was an impossibility. Just because God reports that “A” happened, it does not mean “B” was an impossibility. That is, it does not mean we lacked the ability or freedom to choose differently.
TE: If there is no such thing as B, then only A can happen, right? How is this misrepresenting your view?
MM: Again, I’m talking about what has happened, not what might happen. “A” is what happened. “B” is what could have happened, but didn’t. Thus, when talking about what did happen, “B” does not enter the discussion. When discussing things before they happen, we cannot divorce God from the discussion. Only God knows what happened before it happens.
Last edited by Mountain Man; 02/12/07 11:09 PM.
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Re: The Contradiction
[Re: Tom]
#85362
02/13/07 01:43 AM
02/13/07 01:43 AM
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OP
Active Member 2012
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Posts: 14,795
Lawrence, Kansas
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TE: She speaks of the stone never being rolled away from the tomb, as I recall.
MM: Divinity cannot die. Deity did not die. Are you suggesting Sister White said if Jesus had failed He would have remained in the tomb for eternity?
Yes.
TE: The question of whether the fact that an event A must happen implies that must do A does not require a discussion of God's foreknowledge.
MM: What is the context of “A”? Does it represent what will happen in the future? If so, then what does “B” have to do with it?
The context is as explained from the very first post of this topic. Just re-read the first post.
TE: How is my saying that you say that only A can occur misrepresenting your view? It's just what you said!
MM: That’s not what I believe. Again, just because “A” happens, it does not mean “B” was an impossibility. Just because God reports that “A” happened, it does not mean “B” was an impossibility. That is, it does not mean we lacked the ability or freedom to choose differently.
This is an interesting theory, which we can discuss later, but to be clear, I didn't say you said B was an impossibility. I said you said A was a certainty, which you did say. I did not mispresent your view.
TE: If there is no such thing as B, then only A can happen, right? How is this misrepresenting your view?
MM: Again, I’m talking about what has happened, not what might happen. “A” is what happened. “B” is what could have happened, but didn’t. Thus, when talking about what did happen, “B” does not enter the discussion. When discussing things before they happen, we cannot divorce God from the discussion. Only God knows what happened before it happens.
I didn't say you said anything about B. Please re-read what I said again.
At some point you might wish to deal with the original question of this topic, which has nothing to do with God's foreknowledge. It simply states that if only A can happen (your words!) and not B, then our definition of free will should address this fact. A person cannot do B (assuming A and B are mutually exclusive) if A must happen. How could this not be true?
Those who wait for the Bridegroom's coming are to say to the people, "Behold your God." The last rays of merciful light, the last message of mercy to be given to the world, is a revelation of His character of love.
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Re: The Contradiction
[Re: Mountain Man]
#85363
02/13/07 01:57 AM
02/13/07 01:57 AM
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Dedicated Member
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Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 1,196
Ontario
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MM: God is not a man. His ability to know the future like history is beyond our comprehension. You profess to know something that you profess you cannot know! Another contradiction!
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Re: The Contradiction
[Re: Mountain Man]
#85367
02/13/07 06:31 AM
02/13/07 06:31 AM
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Active Member 2011
3500+ Member
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Joined: May 2002
Posts: 3,965
Sweden
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TV: Did I just read you saying that Jesus is not a Free Moral Agent? Or that God is not a Free Moral Agent?
MM: The abbreviation “FMAs” applies to created beings.
Thomas: Why? Is God lacking in freedom or in morality that He misses out on being a FMA?
TV: Did you just throw out the IJ doctrine?
MM: Nope. Why do you ask?
Thomas: Since you said God doesnt judge. And if He doesnt judge, well... bye bye judgement...
TV: Seem to think? I am at a loss for words, how could I be any more clear on saying that this is exactly my view?
MM: I am sorry it offended you.
Thomas: Correction, frustrated.
TV: Unconditional prophecy is such prophecy where God steps into history and makes things happen.
MM: Yes, God makes sure things go His way. But how does He know FMAs will do it? That’s the part we disagree on. I believe He knows it because, based on the fact He sees the future like a rerun, He has watched it happen already.
Thomas: And I say that if in Gods perspective it has happened already, neither He nor we do anything at all but what fate has portioned out to us.
Galatians 2 21 I do not frustrate the grace of God: for if righteousness come by the law, then Christ is dead in vain.
It is so hazardous to take here a little and there a little. If you put the right little's together you can make the bible teach anything you wish. //Graham Maxwell
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Re: The Contradiction
[Re: Mountain Man]
#85368
02/13/07 06:34 AM
02/13/07 06:34 AM
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Active Member 2011
3500+ Member
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Joined: May 2002
Posts: 3,965
Sweden
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MM: Divorcing God from this discussion makes it pointless. There is no context upon which to discuss the future. Nobody, but God, knows the future. Saying “A” will happen and “B” cannot happen is meaningless unless we factor in God’s ability to see the future like history, like a rerun.
Thomas: Correction, Divorcing the false image of God (who He is) presented above from this discussion makes it pointless.
Galatians 2 21 I do not frustrate the grace of God: for if righteousness come by the law, then Christ is dead in vain.
It is so hazardous to take here a little and there a little. If you put the right little's together you can make the bible teach anything you wish. //Graham Maxwell
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Re: The Contradiction
[Re: Tom]
#85370
02/13/07 09:02 AM
02/13/07 09:02 AM
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5500+ Member
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Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 6,154
Brazil
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It simply states that if only A can happen (your words!) and not B, then our definition of free will should address this fact. A person cannot do B (assuming A and B are mutually exclusive) if A must happen. How could this not be true? I’m not having much time to follow the discussion, but what Mike is trying to say is, using the illustration of the horse race: you travel to the future and watch the horse race, and see that horse A wins the race. Since you saw that horse A wins, how can horses B, C, D or E win? In this sense we say that only horse A can win, and not horses B, C, D or E. Of course you had five possibilities (any of the horses could win the race) - but once you saw the result, the other possibilities are discarded. Unless, of course, you intervene and, for instance, break the leg of horse A, like Thomas suggested. Applying this to God: He saw that if He created Lucifer, Lucifer would sin at some specific point in time, so He could have opted for not creating Lucifer.
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Re: The Contradiction
[Re: Mountain Man]
#85373
02/13/07 11:30 AM
02/13/07 11:30 AM
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Dedicated Member
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Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 1,196
Ontario
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JB: If God were to let the future go according to knowledge, he would not be righteous; nor would righteousness ever be established. It is indeed in judgment that God affects the future to bring forth righteousness.
MM: Are we discussing the same issues? I am talking about God knowing the future like history, like a rerun, and then telling us what happened. The information He shares with us includes His righteous involvement. Everything God does is right and righteous. His "interventions" are part of it, not an afterthought. When God watches the future like history He sees Himself interacting with FMAs. It's not like He goes back and does something different than He saw.
That would be impossible. That would be impossible! That would be impossible! That would be impossible!
Yes, I am talking about knowledge and free will. Listen well.
There is much more that would be impossible. Like it would be impossible that God could make a choice; that God could render judgment; that God could make a decision; that God could consider… It would be impossible!
Thomas has well recognized what I was saying. You see, given the kind of “knowledge” you assert God has. God will never be able to … oops; God is never able to … oops; God was never able to … hmmm … well anyway – God was never, is never and will never be able to choose, consider, make a decision, and render judgment; just to list some things.
You see that the moment God would ever think to consider; his knowledge would already tell him that he has considered it. The moment God would think to make a judgment, his knowledge would inform him that his judgment is already made and what it was, and no matter how far back in time he would go, he could never go far enough back to actually do the consideration, make the judgment or the choice which his knowledge tells him he has made (he has seen himself make). His knowledge, as you say, would tell him what he has already done. For in this knowledge there is no future, there is no present, no past, only the “past perfect”. Since in this knowledge the future, the present, and the past is all “past perfect” God is himself never able to do anything his knowledge tells him he has done.
Therefore the knowledge is false, because what it says he has done he has not done. And by telling him that he has done it makes him incapable of doing it. Incapable, because to know the consideration and the results of the consideration makes it impossible for one to actually do the consideration. Incapable, because to consider something takes a knowledge which is different than the one you assert; because to render judgment takes a different knowledge than the one you assert. The purpose and result of consideration and judgment is therefore to alter the course, but this is impossible; THIS IS IMPOSSIBLE; for his knowledge, according to you, has already told him the resultant course. So to consider and to render judgment is impossible. It is impossible for God to make a choice for his knowledge tells him the choice he has already made, which he never made, for it has not happened, but is already “past perfect”.
Certain things are just impossible!
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Re: The Contradiction
[Re: Mountain Man]
#85374
02/13/07 11:48 AM
02/13/07 11:48 AM
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Dedicated Member
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Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 1,196
Ontario
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MM, you have put knowledge in the place of God. You have made knowledge God and God knowledge. Such knowledge renders the holder of it completely impotent to do anything about it. Not because to do anything about it would say that the previous was wrong, but because such knowledge makes one incapable of doing the very thing it says he did. The knowledge is unalterable; yet the things it says have never transpired and never can transpire because the holder of this knowledge can never do the things the knowledge says he does.
This reminds me awfully of the original deception at the tree of knowledge: that by having “knowledge” we can be as God.
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Re: The Contradiction
[Re: John Boskovic]
#85375
02/13/07 02:10 PM
02/13/07 02:10 PM
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OP
Active Member 2012
14500+ Member
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Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 14,795
Lawrence, Kansas
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MM: The abbreviation “FMAs” applies to created beings.
Thomas: Why? Is God lacking in freedom or in morality that He misses out on being a FMA?
Thomas is right. You need to use the designation "CFMA" to designate created free moral agents.
Those who wait for the Bridegroom's coming are to say to the people, "Behold your God." The last rays of merciful light, the last message of mercy to be given to the world, is a revelation of His character of love.
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Re: The Contradiction
[Re: Tom]
#85376
02/13/07 02:13 PM
02/13/07 02:13 PM
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OP
Active Member 2012
14500+ Member
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Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 14,795
Lawrence, Kansas
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Applying this to God: He saw that if He created Lucifer, Lucifer would sin at some specific point in time, so He could have opted for not creating Lucifer. Why not do this? Or, better yet, create a version of Lucifer that wouldn't sin?
Those who wait for the Bridegroom's coming are to say to the people, "Behold your God." The last rays of merciful light, the last message of mercy to be given to the world, is a revelation of His character of love.
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