Nate (post: 1455680) wrote:Ah, but this is where it gets interesting. You state that's your free will, but is it? Maybe God is making you choose one of those two for His reasons. If you believe God makes a coin land on heads or tails, why doesn't God make you choose Rocky Road or Pistachio?
Because without this choice, it is senseless to speak of right and wrong, of Heaven and Hell. Without this choice, there is no justice.
Now, God (or Cthulhu, if you prefer, in this sense) can certainly pervert justice, punish people for making them do exactly what He wanted them to do, and call it all "right" and "just". He can call a potato a kiwi fruit, for all it matters]Those who believe in free will admit that God can and does influence people to do things sometimes. God doesn't always do it, but He does sometimes. Look in Exodus at the Pharaoh. God purposely hardened his heart to not let the Israelites go. This is proof that God, at least SOMETIMES, does cause people to do things. But He doesn't
always do it, just sometimes. That's if you believe in free will.[/quote]
No doubt God influenced Pharaoh, but did God 'make' him do it? Pharaoh changed his mind. We do it all the time. God 'hardened his heart' -- note this -- so Pharoah frequently said, "Go, Moses", only to ponder his 'mistake'. God gave Pharoah over to his fears, his sense of 'Nah, these plagues are just coincidence', to 'what will I do without slave labor', to what Pharaoh's advisors and court were no doubt whispering in light of Pharaoh's weakness. Think of Pilate and his wife, Pilate and his sense of 'justice'. Jesus called Pilate's ultimate decision a 'sin' (comparing it favorably, though, to Judas' sin), thereby indicating Pilate was no God-sponsored patsy (just like Pharaoh). Just as Paul says in Romans -- God didn't make mankind sin, but He 'gave them over' to even more sinful behavior because of their unbelief. I don't think God 'made' Pharaoh do anything he wouldn't have done -- God just denied Pharaoh wisdom when Pharaoh most needed it. My explanation and opinion.
But He obviously doesn't do it all the time, just as He doesn't make people do things all the time.
Then we shall agree to disagree. I would like to think God doesn't involve Himself in random happenstance, but the Scriptures seem to indicate otherwise.
And then on the other hand, those who don't believe in luck say "No, nothing can ever happen on its own, ever, God does everything, nothing can do anything without being controlled."
Well, I don't say that.
This is why free will is very parallel to luck in discussion.
And I think it is a false dichotomy. We are made in God's image, which suggests we also have free will, as God has His permissive will. I don't control quantum states, however, and God does. They are two separate issues with two separate engines that look similar only because we don't understand either one thoroughly.
I also would like to hear (and this is an honest, genuine question) why those who think luck does not exist believe in gravity. Does God push/pull objects to the ground and gravity is an illusion created by God's actions?
I guess it depends on what you mean by 'pushing'.
If I leave a candle burning in my living room, and it falls over and burns down the house, and people die, the Courts will find me guilty of negligent homicide. Now, I didn't push the candle over, I didn't set the drapes on fire, I didn't suffocate the victims. The candle and fire did it on their own. But I, as a 'first mover', lit the candle. An unlit candle doesn't burn down a house.
The falling object falls because it exists in a gravitational field created by another massive object (e.g. Earth). It does so in response to physical laws which demand it do so. Those laws were created by God. He is the 'first mover'. Whether it requires His direct intervention or not is of no matter.
So, are there 10,000 angels mediating the fall of that twig or apple or airplane? I suppose there could be, although I find that unnecessary.
Now, the die falling is another matter. It obeys the laws of physics, just as the twig does. It has angular momentum, and translational mechanics determine how it rolls. In theory, we could trace everything from the temperature of the die itself, the amount of humidity on the craps table (or concrete sidewalk), the orientation of the die as it leaves my hand back to a moment when I picked up the die and started to change its facing by rolling it. So, in theory, if we had enough data, we should know what it would roll even before I threw it.
But that's not what Scripture says.
Now, perhaps that is splitting hairs. After all, the tower in Siloam fell (see Luke). Did it fall due to negligence, a gust of wind, age...? Jesus didn't seem to indicate there was any God-smiting going on, just that it fell over. Where were those 10,000 angels?
It just doesn't add up. As I said, if we know that there are things God does not do (God doesn't make things fall, gravity does that), then obviously God does not do everything.
Syllogism refuted, as argued above.
And if God does not do everything, then obviously luck exists, because God doesn't make everything happen.
Logical conclusion based on false proposition is not necessarily false, but I still have to disagree.
Okay. Hopefully I have made myself really clear this time, and won't be misunderstood. I have tried really hard to express it in the least confusing way I can.
You were quite clear. I am not convinced it is a sound argument. You are not being misunderstood, just disagreed with.