A
I agonised about this one for years until I realised something. God is trans-temporal, outside time, so what he has done in the past is done in the light of decisions we will freely make in the future.
If you want to think about it in terms of Dr Who (I hope everyone knows what I'm talking about) then as soon as someone accepts Jesus, God leaps in the TARDIS and goes back to predestine them for heaven.
In other words I'm not a supporter of predestination or free will, pro or anti Calvin, because as I see it both cases are exactly the same.
Now of course this sounds rather like quantum mechanics. That's because it is rather like quantum mechanics.
This leaves the question "Why doesn't God go back and fix everything?" This one took me a few years as well, then I hit 2Pet3:9 "The Lord is not slow in keeping his promise, as some understand slowness. Instead he is patient with you, not wanting anyone to perish, but everyone to come to repentance."
The way I see it is that if evil goes then free will has gone up the Swanee as well. If you can't do anything wrong you can't make any moral choices. And that means you can't be what God intends you to be.
Tricky, being God, isn't it? Even omnipotence has its problems.
(BTW this is a good example of how, if asked to choose between A and B, I'll consider C, reject D as unworkable, see the problems with F and G, then do H.)
If you want to think about it in terms of Dr Who (I hope everyone knows what I'm talking about) then as soon as someone accepts Jesus, God leaps in the TARDIS and goes back to predestine them for heaven.
In other words I'm not a supporter of predestination or free will, pro or anti Calvin, because as I see it both cases are exactly the same.
Now of course this sounds rather like quantum mechanics. That's because it is rather like quantum mechanics.
This leaves the question "Why doesn't God go back and fix everything?" This one took me a few years as well, then I hit 2Pet3:9 "The Lord is not slow in keeping his promise, as some understand slowness. Instead he is patient with you, not wanting anyone to perish, but everyone to come to repentance."
The way I see it is that if evil goes then free will has gone up the Swanee as well. If you can't do anything wrong you can't make any moral choices. And that means you can't be what God intends you to be.
Tricky, being God, isn't it? Even omnipotence has its problems.
(BTW this is a good example of how, if asked to choose between A and B, I'll consider C, reject D as unworkable, see the problems with F and G, then do H.)