Jesus came to earth to die for our sins. But what if he found no one who was willing to kill him?
perhaps divine Providence guided the events of the time, so that Jesus could show us his love by dying on the cross, but that begs the question, did the accusers, Pilate, and those who crucified Christ, have any choice in the matter?
If we have true libertarian free will, I feel it must have been possible for those pounding the nails on the cross, to have changed their minds and let Jesus go free.
But how then would Jesus’s prophecies he made about having to die and be raised up, be fulfilled then? he had to be killed, it was predetermined that he should die for our sins.
Well let’s say God knew how they would freely choose. ok So imagine this situation. God wants to save mankind by sending his son to die for our sins, but he can’t forsee anyone who will willingly kill the son of God, what is God to do? This situation must be possible if every human has libertarian free will. It might have been the case that Jesus had no one to crucify him.
How is the neccesity of the crucifixion reconciled with true libertarian free will, and moral responsibility??
just precisely what is the Catholic teaching on Providence and Predestination??
I believe predestination and free will operate together. Chirst ***chose *** the disciples; they didn’t choose him as he himself said. There would have been any number of fishermen on the shores of Galiliee plying their trade, yet the only ones we remember are those Christ
chose. The rest, from the purely historical point of view, have disappeared into limbo. We don’t know a thing about them who they were, their names or anything else.
Frankly, unless there is some predestination, God could not have a plan. Without any predestination, one may as well try to build a building by tossing a dice every time it came to
any decision as to how you’d construct it.
The disciples had a choice to respond, but without Christ’s predetermined choice of 12 particular individuals, their response would not have meant anything.
I’ve said before the night my father died, he appeared in my room. Amongst the things he said, and which I still find hard to come to grips with, was the statement, “I always was doomed! I didn’t really have any choice!” Later however, he stated equally, “I was willing” (to act in such a cruel, stupid fashion for 20 years).
I argued the toss and said “That can’t be right!” He replied, “Oh, it’s right, all right. You can see that from here”.
As a follow-up to that incident, a couple of years ago, I was arguing with atheists on a Google site about NDE’s (Near Death Experiences), and getting nowhere. To cut a long story short, I prayed that I would meet someone who’d had an NDE. Just two or three days later, I picked up in the Maxi Taxi I was driving a bloke who’d not only had an NDE, but even went to the same high school as the eldest son of the very same uncle who came to tell me my father had died.
It wasn’t coiincidence.
Now it’s one thing if God can merely foresee the future and all the choices we’ll make, which makes our lives predestined from His point of view. But in that case He has not acted in any form.
But when a prayer is so swiftly answered, ***despite ***all the free will choices of customers who led me to the postion where the particular NDE customer was realistically available, where the radio operator had “free will” about the glitch which preserved the job for a Maxi when it should have gone to a local cab; when the NDE passenger needs a cab due to a predetermined booking for a hospital check up; when I chose to either accept or reject the job and it remained on the screen for several minutes while I procrastined, then what w’eve got is a God who can very, very subtly maneouvre situations to bring about His ends,
despite our free wills.
I have no idea how He does it, but He does. And our choices generally are responses to situations which already exist. We don’t make choices in a vacuum.
Predestination and free will exist together. God has a** PLAN**.