C
cleargospel99
Guest
Think about what you just said. If you have free will, then your choice to do evil is done outside the scope of God’s governing Will that controls the universe.Nothing does happen outside of the Will of God, however, we see different “types” of His will. Firstly, there is His positive will. This encompasses the things that God wants to happen to us. However, there is also His permissive will. This means that even though God could possibly run the universe like a big train set, He doesn’t. He allows us to have free will, and to engage in activities that are damaging to ourselves.
Think of the ultimate bad thing: hell. God does not desire any of us to go to hell. Nothing about being in hell could possibly be the least bit good but he allows us to choose it.
But, the consequence of your decision to do evil impacts the universe, not just yourself, so you have a universal chain reaction of uncontrolled events starting with the originating act of “allowed” disobedience.
Now you have to multiply the affect a billions of times, going back many generations, the permeutations are virtually infinite, because according to scripture (all have sinned).
If all the constant sinning, which impacts not only the sinner but all those other victims, then virtually everything that happens, must happen outside the Will of God.
But if we believe that, then how can we simultaneously assert that God is in control, and “everything works together for good”?
If you follow your premise to its conclusion, then random chance must rule and God is not near, but at a distance, observing but not interfering.
Can Satan, or anyone else for that matter, thwart God’s absolute purpose?
(If you are wondering what this has to do with the original thread…
The answer to my question should be fairly straight forward for anyone familiar with the text of the scripture.)
For example: Isaiah 55:11