They cannot repent because what could cause them to repent? If in full knowledge of God they turn against Him, then what can cause them to repent? They already know all the facts, they've tasted of the fruits of heaven, and they still turned against God. What can possibly cause them to repent now? :sBut regarding Hebrew 6:4-6 for example; why can't they be forgiven and repent? — Beebert
What would cause them to regret their actions? They already know everything there is to know. So there isn't anymore knowledge that they can have - so in the absence of additional knowledge, what can cause them to regret their actions?The fact that they regret their actions and want to be with God? — Beebert
What does God's grace have to do with their will? God has already fully revealed Himself to them, and they have rejected Him.I don't know. God's grace? — Beebert
Yes, they could realise that perhaps it was wrong if there was any new & relevant knowledge that they could gain access to. But there isn't.You said man's will is free, so obviously, if they still have their memory intact and remember that they have rejected God, they must be able to realize that perhaps it was wrong. — Beebert
That's false. Many people would like to end up there.If not else, because of the idea of eternal hell. Not many would like to end up in such a place or state — Beebert
No.The only thing that would make it impossible for them to change is if God refuses to forgive them. Does he? — Beebert
God "hardens their hearts" by not breaking their free will. God could force them to believe in Him and thus be saved, but then He would break their freedom of will, and that's not what God is going to do. Thus he "hardens the hearts and blinds the eyes" of unbelievers by allowing them to persist in their sin.I don't know if you saw this, but I edited my earlier post and added the following:
Speaking of that, here is another passage in the bible that I have a hard time with, and which seems to suggest just that God refuses to forgive or heal some people: "He has blinded their eyes and hardened their hearts, so they can neither see with their eyes, nor understand with their hearts, nor turn--and I would heal them."
John 12:40 — Beebert
And it's had an enormous impact on conservative Christianity — Wayfarer
There's a deep historical back-story to how it got this way. That is explained in Michael Allen Gillespie's The Theological Origins of Modernity — Wayfarer
Calvinism is in fact a quite radical form of Christianity, for it breaks, and conserves little, from Christianity as it existed for 1500 years. — Thorongil
Why? Nothing is impossible for God - theoretically. Practically God would not break his creature's free will - but He could do it theoretically. — Agustino
Breaking the free will of his creatures is not logically impossible (like making 2+2=5 is, or creating a stone so heavy that he cannot lift, etc.). And I know Aquinas would not approve, but I hold he's wrong on that ;) :PQuite the voluntarist conception of God you have there. Aquinas would not approve.
I don't think God can create a square circles, perform evil, or make 2+2=5, among other impossible things. Perhaps you should tell me what work the word "theoretically" is supposed to be doing, though. — Thorongil
Why is it wrong when God has created them from nothing and wields complete power over them, not having had to create them in the first place? Does God owe something to His creatures or what? :sI would say it's because he can't. Violating the will of his creatures would be wrong, and God cannot commit wrongdoing. — Thorongil
That doesn't refute my claim. God can create someone and yet it still be wrong for him to violate that person's will. "I created you, therefore, I can commit wrongdoing against you" sounds like Descartes's evil demon, not God. — Thorongil
No it doesn't sound like Descartes evil demon. But the standard of what's right and wrong changes. You keep talking about God committing wrong - that would not be wrong.That's the Orthodox distinction for example between created and Uncreated. You cannot judge the Uncreated by the same standard you judge the Created. Aquinas doesn't see this very well because his distinction is between natural and super-natural - which doesn't go deep enough. — Agustino
Nope. Creator has different rights than creatures. It would be wrong for a creature to deprive you of your free will, not for God. If it wasn't for God, you wouldn't have had free will to begin with, so what harm is being done if He takes what He gave you in the first place?So God violating someone's will becomes right, even though it would otherwise be wrong? That produces a rather nasty conception of God I would refuse to believe in. — Thorongil
Nope.You appear to accept the horn of Euthyphro's dilemma that says something is right is because God commands it — Thorongil
I believe this.is that God commands things because they are right. — Thorongil
Same.I believe there is an objective standard of morality. — Thorongil
Sure.If God exists and he is both immutable and goodness itself, then God is the objective standard of morality and he cannot change that which is good. — Thorongil
Nope.In order for you to maintain your position, you would have to deny that God is immutable or that God is goodness itself — Thorongil
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