C
Cat_Herder
Guest
Let’s look at the episode where Jesus, who is God, told Peter that Peter would deny Him. This shows that God knows the outcome of what Peter would choose. Does it then follow that Peter could not have chosen otherwise? No.
We could ask the same thing about the Annunciation. Everyone knows that Mary could have said no, even though Gabriel, as God’s messenger, had spoken in the same tense (“you WILL conceive and bear a Son.”)
What about when the prophet told David that he would die, and David begged forgiveness? The prophet seemed to revise himself and state that only David’s son would die.
Or at Cana, where Jesus seems to change His mind over the wine at Mary’s request.
God cannot change, though… What happened?
Clearly God knows the outcomes. However, people pick which of the outcomes will come to pass. God could ordain these outcomes–but God has chosen not to do so. It is only because of that choice that God does not “know” what humans will ultimately choose. Not because He cannot know, but because He chooses to remain silent and let us choose.
We could ask the same thing about the Annunciation. Everyone knows that Mary could have said no, even though Gabriel, as God’s messenger, had spoken in the same tense (“you WILL conceive and bear a Son.”)
What about when the prophet told David that he would die, and David begged forgiveness? The prophet seemed to revise himself and state that only David’s son would die.
Or at Cana, where Jesus seems to change His mind over the wine at Mary’s request.
God cannot change, though… What happened?
Clearly God knows the outcomes. However, people pick which of the outcomes will come to pass. God could ordain these outcomes–but God has chosen not to do so. It is only because of that choice that God does not “know” what humans will ultimately choose. Not because He cannot know, but because He chooses to remain silent and let us choose.