**TheTrueCentrist **writes:
So why would God choose to create a world where that purpose is frustrated through sin? He could create a world that is sinless and has free will (i.e. all creatures have perfect union and fellowship with God.)
This will be the last time I answer this question (running over the same ground is only tolerable for a certain extent of time). Here is my final answer:
God eliminating all world’s wherein the potential for sin would be actualized is the functional equivalent to eliminating free will from creation altogether. The reason for this being that free will necessitates, not the necessity of sin, but the necessity of the potential for sin. If there is no potential for sin, then there is no initial free will.
You will then ask: “but what about heaven? Is sin a potential in heaven? If not, then there is no free will in heaven.”
I would reply to this objection by asserting that in heaven, a relationship will exist between the creature and the Creator which transcends all that we know. It is entirely reasonable, however, to posit that our state of permanent sinlessness is due to the eternal love and gratitude at the wonder of the undeserved redemption of infinite worth won for us by Christ. In other words, it may only be because of Christ’s efficacious death and sacrifice on our behalf that we will be able to live without sin.
Precisely *how *free will and our permanent sinlessness work themselves out in heaven, however, I do not know, and I do not claim to know; but I will know it soon enough.
You continue:
Now, we have agreed on a definition of “good,” saying that something good is virtuous. Would a virtuous creator knowingly create a purpose then create creatures he knew would be unable to fulfill that purpose?
Do you believe in objective moral values? What I have heard from you so far is a kind of Humean/utilitarian ethic wherein “values” exist in their either being preferred (Hume) or in their promoting “happiness” (“happiness” meaning the minimization of suffering). You ought to clear this up first, or we cannot really discuss the matter, seeing that any talk of “virtue” will be diseased with equivocation.
Yet, under the assumption that we are both speaking in terms of objective moral values, what is without virtue in God’s action? I suppose it all depends upon how you describe it. From your viewpoint, God is clearly not “good” in our sense of the word, seeing that He created creatures unable to fulfill His purpose.
But has God failed in His purpose? I suppose
that depends upon how you define His purpose. Scripture tells us that Christ is the Lamb of God slain before the
foundation of the world. Thus, it seems that God’s purpose includes Christ’s death and destruction of sin, and a consequent eternity with those who have received Christ through faith in God’s promise. In light of Scripture, then, and not our own reasonings about what God “should” have done, I fail to see the force of your objection.
FCCopleston