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Related: About this forumWhy author Randy Alcorn joined one of today’s fiercest Christian debates
Jonathan Merritt
If God is sovereign and in control of the universe, do humans really have free will? If humans have free will to do as they please, can God really be in control? The debate over Gods sovereignty and humans free will is one of the hottest among Christians perennially. And now Randy Alcorn, New York Times bestselling author of Heaven and If God is Good, has decided he wants in on it.
In Alcorns new book,Hand in Hand: The Beauty of Gods Sovereignty and Meaningful Human Choice, admits that this issue has become divisive among Christians. During the first decade he was a Christian, Alcorn says he was mostly Arminian (those who emphasize mans free will). Now he is mostly Calvinist (those who emphasize Gods sovereignty). He says he learned much on his journey that others need to know.
Here, we talk about why Alcorn believes the traditional approach to the debate isnt working, what hes saying thats new, and whether he agrees with John Piper that God is responsible for fatalilty-inducing natural disasters.
- See more at: http://jonathanmerritt.religionnews.com/2014/11/11/author-randy-alcorn-joined-one-todays-fiercest-christian-debates/#sthash.I9B5Ry8J.dpuf
Bluenorthwest
(45,319 posts)mistreatment of their neighbors continue unabated.
hrmjustin
(71,265 posts)Not every faith community but many of them.
Religious people fight to make people's lives better every day in tnis world. You broad brush is wrong.
Union Scribe
(7,099 posts)as one of the several groups on DU set up to trash religious people. It is not.
hrmjustin
(71,265 posts)Criticism of religion is not appropriate in this room.
rug
(82,333 posts)Trite, bigoted bullshit.
el_bryanto
(11,804 posts)rug
(82,333 posts)RA: Im compelled to recognize that . . . . "
AtheistCrusader
(33,982 posts)I don't consider it difficult mental gymnastics to, hypothetically holding the claim of an all powerful supernatural god to be true, to consider that such a being might withhold exercising its power to protect us from our environment (Which is hazardous to us in some conditions), to allow us the full experience of our free will.
If you're not free to fail, you aren't free at all.
We know why 'bad' weather happens. It's the question of 'why no divine intervention' that seems to vex people. It doesn't seem a difficult leap that such a being might value our free will on principle, so highly, that it must allow us to struggle against, and sometimes, fail to compete with our environment.
I don't understand why this is a difficult question (again, hypothetically assuming such a being is real). Do we want to be pets/slaves, or do we want to be free and assume the risks? Just because a god is all powerful and CAN intervene, doesn't mean it should, or that the choice of non-interference carries a moral burden for that god.
If I believed, and thought I had a choice, I would choose the full richness of free will, and all the risks it entails. I'm disappointed people are still spending so many cycles debating over such a seemingly obvious question. From the excerpt, it looks like the author sailed right past it.
To wander further afield, this sovereign/free will debate seems to have brought the definition of 'portmanteau' from the preface to Alice in Wonderland to mind:
... take the two words "fuming" and "furious." Make up your mind that you will say both words, but leave it unsettled which you will say first. Now open your mouth and speak. If your thoughts incline ever so little towards "fuming," you will say "fuming-furious"; if they turn, by even a hair's breadth, towards "furious," you will say "furious-fuming"; but if you have the rarest of gifts, a perfectly balanced mind, you will say "frumious" (Gardner The Annotated Alice 195).