Can We Really Exercise Free Will?

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Think as you wish. However, I believe that @Everlasting-Grace was making much-to-do about nothing. I never implied that men's
writing was to be placed above scripture. I do however, think that the thoughts of others help us in forming our own understanding.

Christ must have thought along the same lines as He chose disciples and gave them the commission to Go Into The World.
Some are prone to making much ado about the nothing of their vain imaginations. Quite sad how frequently they do so.

That particular poster made up a slew of lies about me also.

https://christianchat.com/bible-dis...ercise-free-will.218061/page-172#post-5537667
 
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Yes I did read it. and Yes. my comment still stands


You want God to be a God who is NOT a god of love. who send our wives, husbands and daughters and best friends to hell without even giving them an opportunity.

wlll you can have that God.

because i tell you right now. if people get to heaven, and are sad their loved ones are not there. and find Out God kept the truth from them, and did not even give them a chance.

mark my word. there will be another rebellion
I have always believed that there would be no sadness in heaven.
 
Think as you wish. However, I believe that @Everlasting-Grace was making much-to-do about nothing. I never implied that men's writing was to be placed above scripture. I do however, think that the thoughts of others help us in forming our own understanding.

Christ must have thought along the same lines as He chose disciples and gave them the commission to Go Into The World.
I was making a point we should not put up words of men, and put them above the word of God like many make them equal too the word of God.

And warning that many of us pick people that believe as we do and quote them..

and again, when discussing we can mention them, but we better hold the word of God as the root source
 
Some are prone to making much ado about the nothing of their vain imaginations. Quite sad how frequently they do so.

That particular poster made up a slew of lies about me also.

https://christianchat.com/bible-dis...ercise-free-will.218061/page-172#post-5537667
prove the lie

prove you do not believe God does not give all men and women an opportunity to be saved.

Prove God does not keep the truth from them

Did you repent of this belief?

if you did, praise God

if you did not. then my comment stands..
 
I have always believed that there would be no sadness in heaven.
I believe it too

Because God is a God of love, and we have no need to be sad.

If my daughter rejected God. i will probably feel bad. but thats on her', on the other hand, If God kept it from her. so she had no choice.. well thats a different story
 
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the things of God are foolishness to those who are not his

Not Paul did not have a war. He did everything through his flesh. even his obedience to the law was according to his flesh. not according to the spirit.

but hey, thanks for the conversation.. We will never agree. and no need to continue

Thanks for ending this. I kind of expected it based upon previous discussions in which I offered to get into Scripture more in depth with you and you wouldn't do so. When you start the mocking and fallacious inferences it all goes down hill from there.

FWIW, of you do ever desire to do some more thinking about the Greek tenses and the depth of Greek rhetoric, philosophy, drama, etc. built into their language and thus capable of expressing their thinking which is quite different than much of western thought, though we do have the historic present also:

A search for the historic present in literature:

Here's a vivid example from Alice Walker’s essay “Beauty: When the Other Dancer Is the Self”, where she uses the historic present tense to draw readers into a childhood memory:​
“It is a bright summer day in 1947. My father, a fat, funny man with beautiful eyes and a subversive wit, is trying to decide which of his eight children he will take with him to the county fair. My mother, of course, will not go. She is knocked out from getting most of us ready...”
Although the events occurred decades earlier, Walker narrates them in the present tense“is,” “will,” “go”—to create immediacy and emotional resonance. It feels like you're right there, watching the scene unfold.​

A quick search of views over time re: historic present and other uses of the present tense:

Quick Definitions
  • Prosopopoeia: Rhetorical technique where the speaker adopts another character’s voice.
  • Historic Present: Use of present-tense verbs to narrate past events, often for vividness or emotional immediacy.
Interpretive Traditions on Romans 7:7–25 – "I" and Tense Use
  1. Reformed Tradition (Augustine, Luther, Calvin)
    • "I": Paul as a regenerate believer
    • Present Tense: Autobiographical, ongoing struggle
    • Prosopopoeia: Typically rejected
    • Implication: Christian life includes continual tension with sin; Romans 7 is normative
  2. Early Church Fathers (Origen, Chrysostom)
    • "I": Unregenerate or pre-conversion Paul
    • Present Tense: Dramatizes pre-Christian experience
    • Prosopopoeia: Implied
    • Implication: Romans 7 describes bondage under Law, leading to Spirit-filled freedom in Romans 8
  3. Sanday & Headlam (Early Modern View)
    • "I": Possibly autobiographical but rhetorically heightened
    • Present Tense: Used for vividness (historic present)
    • Prosopopoeia: Possible
    • Implication: Tension resolves at 7:25a; pivot to Spirit empowerment
  4. Stanley Stowers (Modern Rhetorical View)
    • "I": Representative figure (likely Jewish, not Paul)
    • Present Tense: Dramatic impersonation
    • Prosopopoeia: Explicit
    • Implication: Romans 7 is a constructed voice showing Law's inability to justify or sanctify
  5. Will Timmins
    • "I": Representative, but with theological connections to Paul
    • Present Tense: Rhetorical and experiential blend
    • Prosopopoeia: Qualified
    • Implication: Merges rhetorical strategy with existential depth; emphasizes interpretive flexibility
  6. Evangelical Scholars (Douglas Moo, Thomas Schreiner)
    • "I": Paul as believer speaking of inner conflict
    • Present Tense: Reflects real-time Christian struggle
    • Prosopopoeia: Generally dismissed
    • Implication: Romans 7 reflects believer's reality before full Spirit-empowered transformation in Romans 8
As I've attempted to point out, this discussion has been going on for a long time. It's a real discussion based in interpretation of context and use of tenses in rhetorical Greek literature.

You're obviously welcome to your opinion, but mocking other opinions IMO puts you in a bad light in the overall discussion.

As I said, I understand both your and @sawdust views. I also understand the above historical discussions.
 
Thanks for ending this. I kind of expected it based upon previous discussions in which I offered to get into Scripture more in depth with you and you wouldn't do so. When you start the mocking and fallacious inferences it all goes down hill from there.

FWIW, of you do ever desire to do some more thinking about the Greek tenses and the depth of Greek rhetoric, philosophy, drama, etc. built into their language and thus capable of expressing their thinking which is quite different than much of western thought, though we do have the historic present also:

A search for the historic present in literature:

Here's a vivid example from Alice Walker’s essay “Beauty: When the Other Dancer Is the Self”, where she uses the historic present tense to draw readers into a childhood memory:​
“It is a bright summer day in 1947. My father, a fat, funny man with beautiful eyes and a subversive wit, is trying to decide which of his eight children he will take with him to the county fair. My mother, of course, will not go. She is knocked out from getting most of us ready...”
Although the events occurred decades earlier, Walker narrates them in the present tense“is,” “will,” “go”—to create immediacy and emotional resonance. It feels like you're right there, watching the scene unfold.​

A quick search of views over time re: historic present and other uses of the present tense:

Quick Definitions
  • Prosopopoeia: Rhetorical technique where the speaker adopts another character’s voice.
  • Historic Present: Use of present-tense verbs to narrate past events, often for vividness or emotional immediacy.
Interpretive Traditions on Romans 7:7–25 – "I" and Tense Use
  1. Reformed Tradition (Augustine, Luther, Calvin)
    • "I": Paul as a regenerate believer
    • Present Tense: Autobiographical, ongoing struggle
    • Prosopopoeia: Typically rejected
    • Implication: Christian life includes continual tension with sin; Romans 7 is normative
  2. Early Church Fathers (Origen, Chrysostom)
    • "I": Unregenerate or pre-conversion Paul
    • Present Tense: Dramatizes pre-Christian experience
    • Prosopopoeia: Implied
    • Implication: Romans 7 describes bondage under Law, leading to Spirit-filled freedom in Romans 8
  3. Sanday & Headlam (Early Modern View)
    • "I": Possibly autobiographical but rhetorically heightened
    • Present Tense: Used for vividness (historic present)
    • Prosopopoeia: Possible
    • Implication: Tension resolves at 7:25a; pivot to Spirit empowerment
  4. Stanley Stowers (Modern Rhetorical View)
    • "I": Representative figure (likely Jewish, not Paul)
    • Present Tense: Dramatic impersonation
    • Prosopopoeia: Explicit
    • Implication: Romans 7 is a constructed voice showing Law's inability to justify or sanctify
  5. Will Timmins
    • "I": Representative, but with theological connections to Paul
    • Present Tense: Rhetorical and experiential blend
    • Prosopopoeia: Qualified
    • Implication: Merges rhetorical strategy with existential depth; emphasizes interpretive flexibility
  6. Evangelical Scholars (Douglas Moo, Thomas Schreiner)
    • "I": Paul as believer speaking of inner conflict
    • Present Tense: Reflects real-time Christian struggle
    • Prosopopoeia: Generally dismissed
    • Implication: Romans 7 reflects believer's reality before full Spirit-empowered transformation in Romans 8
As I've attempted to point out, this discussion has been going on for a long time. It's a real discussion based in interpretation of context and use of tenses in rhetorical Greek literature.

You're obviously welcome to your opinion, but mocking other opinions IMO puts you in a bad light in the overall discussion.

As I said, I understand both your and @sawdust views. I also understand the above historical discussions.
lol

you thank me for ended it. then spent all this time trying to still prove your point.

PS. You did not prove your point. but thanks for trying

Moving on.....
 
prove the lie

prove you do not believe God does not give all men and women an opportunity to be saved.

Prove God does not keep the truth from them

Did you repent of this belief?

if you did, praise God

if you did not. then my comment stands..
What about places the gospel didn't go, and people who never heard the gospel?
 
Free willers deny this. They say the flesh can bring forth the good fruit of faith.
So tell us:
What is the difference between Zacharias and Elizabeth and your "natural man"?

Oh wait....I know. Free will and right choices.

That was easy.

[Luk 1:5-6 KJV] 5 There was in the days of Herod, the king of Judaea, a certain priest named Zacharias, of the course of Abia: and his wife [was] of the daughters of Aaron, and her name [was] Elisabeth. 6 And they were both righteous before God, walking in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord blameless.
 
What about places the gospel didn't go, and people who never heard the gospel?
So your saying God is not fair?

Or is it God knows they would not believe no matter what he did. and if they would. He gets them the gospel?

how did those in the OT get saved never having heard the law (think ninevah and other places)
 
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I believe that to solve this doctrine debate we have to use,

"not either/or, but both/and."

The concept of "both/and" in Bible interpretation suggests that many biblical truths can coexist rather than being mutually exclusive.

Hebrews 11:6 ESV
And without faith it is impossible to please him, for whoever would draw near to God must believe that he exists and that he rewards those who seek him.

Scripture has three words. Faith (pistis) faith (pisteuo) and believe (pisteuo)

PISTEUO:

4100 pisteúō (from 4102 /pístis, "faith," derived from 3982 /peíthō, "persuade, be persuaded") – believe (affirm, have confidence); used of persuading oneself (= human believing) and with the sacred significance of being persuaded by the Lord
(= faith-believing).

Only the context indicates whether 4100 /pisteúō ("believe") is
self-serving (without sacred meaning), or the believing that leads to/proceeds
from God's inbirthing of faith.


PISTIS:

Ephesians 2:8 New International Version (NIV)
8 For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God—

(4102/pistis) It is always a gift from God, and never something that can be produced
by people.

CONCLUSION:

In short, 4102/pistis ("faith") for the believer is "God's divine
persuasion" – and therefore distinct from human belief (confidence), yet involving
it. The Lord continuously births faith in the yielded believer so they can know what He prefers, i.e. the persuasion of His will (1 Jn 5:4)

This advances the discussion re: belief vs. faith that I earlier flagged @sawdust @HeIsHere @cv5 @Hakawaka about. IMO it would be a good discussion to continue.

First, a question due to the way these threads go: What theological tradition do you hold to, if any? Is it Reformed?

Next, a few comments and questions:
  1. In Eph2:8 there is substantial debate re: "faith" being part of the gift. Based upon the grammar, many do not interpret faith being the gift, but the gift being the entire phrase paraphrased, "salvation by grace through faith." Your thoughts?
  2. Under pisteuō you're including this "God's inbirthing of faith" concept apart from really proving it. In your description you seem to be saying since the second use of pisteuō is translated as "believe" it means "used of persuading oneself (= human believing)" - so people are persuading themselves about God's existence and being a rewarder? Is this what you're saying?
A few questions to others (and please correct me if I've misunderstood):
  1. @sawdust you seem to be saying, as does the above, that belief and faith are not the same. Can you elaborate?
  2. @HeIsHere I think you said pistis is belief/faith, so they are the same. Correct?
  3. @cv5 any thoughts?
  4. @Hakawaka any thoughts or were you mainly bringing up and supporting synergism?
  5. Anybody else?
 
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I have always believed that there would be no sadness in heaven.
Hebrews13-14rs.png

Hebrews 13 verse 14~ This world is not our home; we are looking forward to our everlasting home in heaven. There will be no more death or mourning or crying or pain
:)
 
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What about places the gospel didn't go, and people who never heard the gospel?
It’s still going will until the end

Even if someone lives and never heard like those in Noah’s time

“For Christ also suffered once for sins, the righteous for the unrighteous, to bring you to God. He was put to death in the body but made alive in the Spirit. After being made alive, he went and made proclamation to the imprisoned spirits— to those who were disobedient long ago when God waited patiently in the days of Noah while the ark was being built. In it only a few people, eight in all, were saved through water,”
‭‭1 Peter‬ ‭3:18-20‬ ‭NIV‬‬

even if a person had died before it was preached

“For this is the reason the gospel was preached even to those who are now dead, so that they might be judged according to human standards in regard to the body, but live according to God in regard to the spirit.”
‭‭1 Peter‬ ‭4:6‬ ‭NIV‬‬
 
Anybody else?

1-Corinthians4-7b-John3-27-Romans9-15-16s.png

1 Corinthians 4 verse 7b; John 3 verse 27; Romans 9 verses 15-16 ~ What do you have that you did not receive? And if you did also receive it, why do you boast as not having received it? John replied, "A man can receive only that which is given him from heaven." "I will have mercy on whom I have mercy, and I will have compassion on whom I have compassion." So then, it does not depend on man's desire or effort, but on God's mercy.
 
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lol

you thank me for ended it. then spent all this time trying to still prove your point.

PS. You did not prove your point. but thanks for trying

Moving on.....

You didn't have to read or respond to my closing out with some detail in case you or others wanted to consider some more information, now did you.

As I noted about prior discussions, once your mocking begins it seems to continue. You're the lol guy who acts like he knows Greek.

Read it or don't. Your choice. But there are others potentially reading besides you and my point is valid and part of the discussion between those who actually know the Greek language and study types of literature and grammar in order to continue the work in Scripture analysis.

As I just said, you're not the only reader. If you're not able to acknowledge the reality that there is and has been debate for millennia, and that you may be wrong, that's on you and not surprising.
 
You didn't have to read or respond to my closing out with some detail in case you or others wanted to consider some more information, now did you.

As I noted about prior discussions, once your mocking begins it seems to continue. You're the lol guy who acts like he knows Greek.

Read it or don't. Your choice. But there are others potentially reading besides you and my point is valid and part of the discussion between those who actually know the Greek language and study types of literature and grammar in order to continue the work in Scripture analysis.

As I just said, you're not the only reader. If you're not able to acknowledge the reality that there is and has been debate for millennia, and that you may be wrong, that's on you and not surprising.
once again.

bowing out.

why do you continue to call me out?

Yes. I laugh out loud alot. because I can not believe some of the things I hear. and its better to laugh, then to get angry.
 
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