Free will: the only one of God's gifts that is truly ours?

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How can free will be taken away from you, Gloria1?
Denial of grace amounts to destruction of free will. Free will can be destroyed even by natural means such as addiction. That’s essentially what vice is - enslavement of the will.

Besides that, it seems to me that all gifts are truly given to us to be ours. I don’t see any reason for singling out free will.
 
Nice questions. Before asking “may I” you should ask “can I” (as in, “is it possible”). And the answer is no. Opting out of God’s plan = rejecting God = choosing hell. Sorry, that’s just how the terms are defined.

On the other hand you could opt out of what you mistakenly believe to be God’s plan, which wouldn’t necessarily be rejecting God.
So I’m forced into this scheme…hmmm, that certainly doesn’t seem like a freely given gift.
 
So I’m forced into this scheme…hmmm, that certainly doesn’t seem like a freely given gift.
Well if you want to look at it that way (and you are free to), it seems more like a freely offered gift that you are freely rejecting. (So you’re right: the giving of the gift is never completed.)
 
Well if you want to look at it that way (and you are free to), it seems more like a freely offered gift that you are freely rejecting. (So you’re right: the giving of the gift is never completed.)
It’s not just refusing the gifts at the party, it’s having the freedom in choosing not go to the party…opting out completely and going to the pub for a pint.

With Gods gift, I’m forced to go the party and I’m told that if I reject the gift, I’ll suffer horrifically for eternity in a horrible place called hell.
 
It’s not just refusing the gifts at the party, it’s having the freedom in choosing not go to the party…opting out completely and going to the pub for a pint.

With Gods gift, I’m forced to go the party and I’m told that if I reject the gift, I’ll suffer horrifically for eternity in a horrible place called hell.
I’m not sure what the point of your analogy is: you can go wherever you want, God still offers you the gift and you can still freely refuse it.

Unless you’re suggesting that you would like to have a gift freely offered to you (that of choosing to exist or not) before you even exist - which is obviously absurd.
 
Unless you’re suggesting that you would like to have a gift freely offered to you (that of choosing to exist or not) before you even exist - which is obviously absurd.
Why is it absurd? Is God not all powerful? Are you limiting the power of your all powerful God?
 
Why is it absurd? Is God not all powerful? Are you limiting the power of your all powerful God?
Of course (I’m) not, that (too) would be absurd. Sorry if you don’t like it, but this is again just by definition: contradictions are absurd. You cannot *exist *so as to make a choice while at the same time not existing. That’s a contradiciton and as such it’s absurd.
 
Hell is a state of self-inflicted isolation from God.
Their isolated existence is the result of their abuse of free will.
Their abuse of free will isolates them from God.
Without God free will could not exist!
I don’t! My exact words:
“Their isolated existence is the result of their abuse of free will.”
If God is real, he forced existence on me and he forces judgement upon me.
  1. As I and others have observed, existence cannot be forced on a non-existent person.
  2. A non-existent person cannot be given a choice as to whether to exist or not.
  3. Judgment is not forced on you. Your own actions are your judge. What could be fairer than that? Do you really believe criminals and philanthropists should get the same results?
  4. Do you reject the concept of justice and the value of existence? If so why are you bothering to hang around?
I was not free to decline existence, I am not free in choosing to opt out of judgment and I am not free to decline both heaven and hell.
You are perfectly free to decline existence because you believe this is the only existence we have! Nobody is stopping you from taking an overdose…

You are also free to decline both heaven and hell by denying that they exist - which is precisely what you do. So what are you moaning about? :rolleyes:
 
Denial of grace amounts to destruction of free will. Free will can be destroyed even by natural means such as addiction. That’s essentially what vice is - enslavement of the will.
If that were so, if man loses his free will when he loses grace, then why would God want sinners to repent? Anyone who is in under mortal sin has no grace in him, and yet such a man can still choose to repent, right? Repentance is an act of the will.

The idea that man under sin has no free will is a product of Protestantism called the Doctrine of Total Depravity, and it is rejected by the Catholic Church as a heresy.
Besides that, it seems to me that all gifts are truly given to us to be ours. I don’t see any reason for singling out free will.
Can you please give an instance where man’s free will is lost or destroyed?
 
Council of Trent, Sixth Session, “Decree on Justification”

CANON V.-If any one saith, that, since Adam’s sin, the free will of man is lost and extinguished; or, that it is a thing with only a name, yea a name without a reality, a figment, in fine, introduced into the Church by Satan; let him be anathema.
 
You are perfectly free to decline existence because you believe this is the only existence we have! Nobody is stopping you from taking an overdose…

You are also free to decline both heaven and hell by denying that they exist - which is precisely what you do. So what are you moaning about? :rolleyes:
Of course, Zatzat, you must bear the consequences of what you decide on. For that is the price of being free: responsibility.

TANSTAAFL…

Or, as Uncle Ben would say: “With great power comes great responsibility.” 😉
 
If that were so, if man loses his free will when he loses grace, then why would God want sinners to repent? Anyone who is in under mortal sin has no grace in him, and yet such a man can still choose to repent, right? Repentance is an act of the will.

The idea that man under sin has no free will is a product of Protestantism called the Doctrine of Total Depravity, and it is rejected by the Catholic Church as a heresy.
You’re reading too much into what I said and into what the Church has said in rejecting total depravity. I’m not talking about the very specific doctrine that earthly man has no freedom whatsoever since the Fall. That is the specific doctrine that the Catholic Church rejects. She does not reject the notion that man can lose his freedom.
Can you please give an instance where man’s free will is lost or destroyed?
An addict has lost or destroyed a great deal of her freedom (which is not to say it can’t be regained). A reprobate loses his freedom permanently. Those in hell have no freedom to choose to love.
 
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