The_Exodus, Thank you for your replies. You help me clarify things, but I have yet to see a solution to the free will problem which makes sense to me.
But the question remains, how is the final ratio determined?
To me, our life on earth is sort of like life in a maze. In this Maze are several exists, but, only one that goes to Hell. There are signposts all along the ways to prevent one from making that choice. And there are rewards for right choices, all along the way.
Is man the sole author of his own destiny? Does man decide entirely for himself if he will accept or reject God? If man writes his own destiny, then God does not write it. In fact, God is bound by whatever man chooses, as God respects our free will.
Essentially, yes. God provides Graces, all along the way. But, it is ultimately our decision whether or not to seize them.
So if man is truly free, man can write the final ratio to be anything he would like, ranging from 0% to 100% going to heaven. It is like an political election; each man casts his vote for or against God, and the result of the election is entirely the will of the people, and the people alone.
Yes, with the exception of what God has previously written to our hearts and the providence of Grace, all along the way.
Now if God is really bound by man’s collective choice, God will have to accept the outcome, whatever it may be, for God respects our free will.
True. If He didn’t already know how it would turn out.
So, when God turned over the destiny of man to man’s free will, God was taking a tremendous gamble, because he was giving up control of the outcome to man. God did everything he could to get a favourable result, including sending his own Son to die for man. But the tremendous love of God still had to respect out free will, and thus, for all God did to bring man to himself, God has no gaurrantte that even a single soul will be his in the end.
Not a “gamble”,
per se. Although it certainly, to us, seems like one. God did choose to instantiate a world where some would go where He wouldn’t be pleased. But, who knows what else God might have in store. I perceive Hell to be a state of existence wherein souls float endlessly, and are devoid of all somatics. But, these souls can think, and think, and think. About the darkness; the void, the complete lack of any and all communication.
What a tradgedy if heaven were to be empty for all eternity, but when God allowed man to be the author of his own destiny, he neccesarily allowed for the possibility, leaving the result to a collassaul “roll of the cosmic dice.” I think that is highly dangerous and cruel for God to do such a thing as that.
Well, we already know that’s not going to happen. Undoubtedly, some of us have already gone to heaven.
Now this state of affairs I just described does not tell the whole story, because God is omniesceint. The problem is that, if God does not “roll the dice,” he instead deterimines the outcome. He can’t have it both ways. Either God let’s man decide his destiny, or God decides it for man.
Well thought out and well stated.
So indeed, the question remains, what criterion does God use to decide which universe to make actual? Is a fallen universe “better” than a universe that is not fallen? I can see that possibly yes, but only if every one who falls eventually makes it back to God.
Well, He Created the “unfallen” universe first. But, then, we fell.
The real question is, how is it that a universe where there are people in hell is better than a universe with only people in heaven? (with the possibiliy of hell remaining, just nobody choosing it).
I don’t think Angels and humans can do that . . . and own their own copy of unlimited
free will at the same time. We’re are definitionally (and, actually) “
imperfect.”
The one answer which I often hear to this question is that in order for God to give us the full gift of free will, and the full gift of heaven, a necessary consequence would be that some might refuse that gift.
Yes.
But I come back to my other point, what if God provided for heaven, but nobody ended up choosing it?? Would the mere existence of heaven, (albeit empty) be a justification for trillions of people in hell?? I think not.
But, that has not happened, in our
Time … but, God already knew that would be the case.
God bless,
jd