I don’t think I implied that you were denying free will - If I did, I apologize. And I think it’s better to give someone complete choice.
I guess I sort of see what you are trying to say. Our choice to love is “more genuine” when given the choice of not loving. Basically, seeing the fact that we could have chosen
not to love is what makes our choice
to love all the more “authentic.” Is that the point you are trying to get across?
Fully agree.
I didn’t know that Catholic theologians didn’t use this term. I guess I’ll just say “perfectly good” from now on to remove any confusion. Either way, I understand that God is not some pushover. Even the tiniest sin against an infinite God is an abomination and warrants eternal punishment.
So it seems as if, after all of this discussion, that God
does create knowing that many will choose hell. And the Church’s answer seems to basically be… we have free will. That seems to take all the attention away from God in the matter and put the trouble on us. Which I don’t disagree with (we aren’t perfect after all).
I don’t know, I would have thought that after 2000 years there would have been a better answer.
- God is omniscient.
- God is “perfectly good”.
- God creates some people knowing that they will go to hell.
- Theologians still believe God is good knowing (3).
This God doesn’t seem “perfectly good” to me. So I guess I need to re-evaluate what it means to be “perfectly good,” right?