J
JamesCaruso
Guest
It is the definition of omniscience itself. I can surely see how God can see the future of all cuase and effect type things. No problem. I can even see how he can see future “free will” decisions that we make, owing IMO to the fact that while we have free will, we do not have it perfectly, because we have fallen natures and are either somewhat slaves to sin or OTOH not perfectly slaves to obedience by virtue of sanctifying grace. My question has to do with perfect free agency.
We know that God cannot do certain things such as commit evil, break His own promise, or cease to exist. These go without saying. My question has to do with His ability to “know” the result of an exercise of perfect free will, that is, free will that has not been weakened by sin. My reasoning is that if a person possesses perfect free will, then his exercise of that free will, being that it is perfect, is unpredictable. I can see where God can see what you or I will do because we are not perfectly free. To some degree all of us are enslaved to our sinful nature, at least, until we have reached the perfection of heaven. But if we were perfectly free as Mary and before her, Eve, was, could God “know” with absolute certitude what we would decide?
I see God’s existing outside of time to mean that time is irrelevant to Him, because He is perfect and thereby unchanging. It does not mean to me that He is in the future or in the past, but that His future and past are the same as His present, since He is unchanging. OTOH, our existence is a series of instances, no two exactly alike, at least, until we reach the perfection of heaven. In this way of looking at it, it is easy to see how God can see the future of anything that is strictly cause and effect, the material world. But perfect free will seems, at least in my mind, to transcend the material world of cause and effect. If a exercise of free will is truly free, it seems to me that God has placed a restriction on this case and His own choice, and created a future fact that even He cannot know.
I am interested in what others have to say on this.
We know that God cannot do certain things such as commit evil, break His own promise, or cease to exist. These go without saying. My question has to do with His ability to “know” the result of an exercise of perfect free will, that is, free will that has not been weakened by sin. My reasoning is that if a person possesses perfect free will, then his exercise of that free will, being that it is perfect, is unpredictable. I can see where God can see what you or I will do because we are not perfectly free. To some degree all of us are enslaved to our sinful nature, at least, until we have reached the perfection of heaven. But if we were perfectly free as Mary and before her, Eve, was, could God “know” with absolute certitude what we would decide?
I see God’s existing outside of time to mean that time is irrelevant to Him, because He is perfect and thereby unchanging. It does not mean to me that He is in the future or in the past, but that His future and past are the same as His present, since He is unchanging. OTOH, our existence is a series of instances, no two exactly alike, at least, until we reach the perfection of heaven. In this way of looking at it, it is easy to see how God can see the future of anything that is strictly cause and effect, the material world. But perfect free will seems, at least in my mind, to transcend the material world of cause and effect. If a exercise of free will is truly free, it seems to me that God has placed a restriction on this case and His own choice, and created a future fact that even He cannot know.
I am interested in what others have to say on this.