Hitetlen:
I agree you, but this brings us back to the original proposition: I said that the mere existence of free will does not allow God “off the hook” as far as the problem of evil goes. If the existence of free will is not the cause of evil, and evil exists, then what is the cause? You cannot argue “men’s sinful nature”, because God either did not create our “sinful nature”, or he did. If he did not create it, where did it come from? Did it come from against God’s desire? How is that possible? If he did create it, he is responsible.
You are treating free will as part of a chain of cause and effect, whereas free will actually implies the choice of how it is exercised is a cause in itself. The cause of evil is the way in which certain creatures chose to exercise their free will. Free will means that they could have chosen good, and therefore, are responsible for having chosen evil. Those angels, and Mary, who chose good from the first have free will, but exercised their free will in the choice to do good.
No, I did not mean compulsion, just a desire not to do evil. One can acts against one’s desire, but does not have to.
This is different for creatures without original sin or the stain of original sin, and those who have this. Without it, there is not a desire for evil in the sense that we have it, though choosing evil is still possible and was done by some beings. Those that have the stain of original sin (you and I) are subject to a disordered desire to do evil (concupiscence). Again, if you would like more information about this doctrine you might find a better explanation by looking in the Catechism, or try the Ask an Apologist forum, the Catholic Encyclopedia at
newadvent.com, or just start another thread on the topic here, since I’m sure you’ll get a better explanation than I have given.
Huh, that is new to me. Do you mean that heaven is “frozen”? There is no change, no “time”, just a frozen existence? I don’t think that is a doctrine anyone has ever suggested. If there is some “meta-time”, then change is possible, and the angels (for example) do not wish to exercise their free will, because its would be against their “nature”. But that is not free will as you defined it.
Not frozen, maybe I could explain it better by saying it is unchanging because it is complete. We change our minds when we are exposed to new information, new experiences, when we see the consequences of our decisions, etc. while angels and saints in heaven have access to all this; they aren’t partially ignorant, as we are, and therefore don’t change their minds.
Again, this is my attempt to express in words a concept which is richer and fuller than the language, so you might get a more complete picture by reading other people’s descriptions.