TheOtherside
Newbie
- Joined
- Sep 17, 2024
- Messages
- 5
I'm gonna need the Vigilant Citizen Forums to chime in here - the concepts of free will and salvation have been bothering me lately.
There have been debates throughout our history on if humans have free will. I see good arguments on both sides, but one thing that bugs me is that we don't have absolute free will. I do not have the freedom to jump 100 feet in the air; it is impossible. I do not have the freedom to choose my own chemicals - I'm stuck with being a dopamine factory. Because I don't have absolute free will, how can I be on the hook for my failures? I'm addicted to things - I want to exercise my free will to get rid of these desires. But I can't. It's very hard to understand how my salvation hinges on this. What's going on here?
Was it really Adam and Eve's fault for eating the fruit? Why was the fruit there in the first place? Why did they desire it when reality could have been structured differently? They didn't choose the structure. How can the Creator set up the structure, and then get mad when we inevitably fail? Of course we will fail, and fail horribly. I don't fully understand how it can be offensive to God when God set it all up. If I place children in an empty room full of marshmallows, I can't be that mad when they inevitably eat the marshmallows.
Is this just something we have to live with? We do our best to trust the test, try to pass the test, and leave the rest to God? Very difficult to make sense of all of this. Which is why I'm calling upon Phipps and Lisa (two legends) to get in here and discuss.
There have been debates throughout our history on if humans have free will. I see good arguments on both sides, but one thing that bugs me is that we don't have absolute free will. I do not have the freedom to jump 100 feet in the air; it is impossible. I do not have the freedom to choose my own chemicals - I'm stuck with being a dopamine factory. Because I don't have absolute free will, how can I be on the hook for my failures? I'm addicted to things - I want to exercise my free will to get rid of these desires. But I can't. It's very hard to understand how my salvation hinges on this. What's going on here?
Was it really Adam and Eve's fault for eating the fruit? Why was the fruit there in the first place? Why did they desire it when reality could have been structured differently? They didn't choose the structure. How can the Creator set up the structure, and then get mad when we inevitably fail? Of course we will fail, and fail horribly. I don't fully understand how it can be offensive to God when God set it all up. If I place children in an empty room full of marshmallows, I can't be that mad when they inevitably eat the marshmallows.
Is this just something we have to live with? We do our best to trust the test, try to pass the test, and leave the rest to God? Very difficult to make sense of all of this. Which is why I'm calling upon Phipps and Lisa (two legends) to get in here and discuss.