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HelenaMT
Guest
But whether God is outside time or not, He has ultimate control over all that exists. It doesn’t matter that we experience time differently. It matters that it is already determined to God. I can’t change whether I had chicken for lunch yesterday, but in your view, God can, so therefore if I had chicken it was because God allowed it, meaning I actually *couldn’t *have chosen differently, even if it felt like I could have.God does not need to predict what you will do to know what you will do. To Him, you have already done it. He is outside of time and hence sees all of time at once.
There is not necessarily a contradiction between determination and free will. Could you change your choice of what to eat yesterday for lunch? No. Does that mean you weren’t free to choose the lunch you wanted? No.
Does that make sense?
Maybe a better way to explain is this: Can we think a thought that God did not intend for us to have, or think something that God has no way of knowing or predicting? This gets us away from problems of ability (I want to fly but I physically can’t, or I want to be free, but I am actually in a prison). If the answer is yes, then it can be said (I think) that our will is free, but if we cannot, it isn’t. But this also means that if we have this type of free will, God is not omniscient in the way you seem to mean.