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Old 03-02-2006, 01:44 PM   #21
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Originally Posted by Hazy Daisy
Well, I'm glad to see you don't reject out of hand the possibility that people who go to heaven might sin after they get there and be thrown out. The vast majority of the Christians I've ever dealt with insist that sin does not and cannot occur in heaven..
That was not quite my point. I was suggesting that the "free ticket" some rely might not be what they think. Of course, the other side is that some who despair of having a ticket might end up just fine.

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Originally Posted by Hazy Daisy
I don't know of anyone who claims outright that seeing God eliminates free will. Usually they claim that seeing God changes people somehow, causing them to never sin again. Aside from the fact that this is a dubious claim (as the OP makes clear), it logically boils down to the elimination of free will for people who see God. The response I usually get when pointing this out is, to put it concisely, "Nuh-uhh!".
I think you are right. We (Christians) have not thought through what heaven will be like. We assume things without much evidence. I find it interesting that the Christian view of heaven is similar to the skeptics view of how things should be now. God should be verifiably present now like he promises to be in the Christian's view of heaven. Both agree this will end all doubt and be ultimately fair and loving. I don't think we have any evidence (see note below) for the elimination of free will in heaven. We are pretty sure it is a perfect place but I don't think we know the mechanics of how it stays that way.
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Originally Posted by Hazy Daisy
Speak for yourself. I have a little thing called reason, and when I find too many contradictions in a story that's supposed to be true, I reject its validity.
Reason is a good thing. Christians would even see it as a gift from God. However, the question we are discussing is asking about God's motivation for not revealing himself more. When we deal with a question of God's motivation, reason might not do much for us. Reason will only answer the question on the assumption that God does what we would do in his place. We would be better off if God would reveal his motivation. This is where the Bible could be helpful if it is, in fact, a record of God's revelation. If the Bible is silent about an issue, I say we need to call our "reason", "speculation" to be honest about it.
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Old 03-02-2006, 01:54 PM   #22
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Originally Posted by Hazy Daisy

Edited to add: A corollary problem is that of whether humans who die and go to heaven can possibly continue to have free will after they get there. If they've been sinners all their lives and only get into heaven on the "Jesus died for me" ticket, doesn't it stand to reason that they'll sin again in heaven, and probably get thrown out just like one third of the angels did? Unless they don't have free will anymore... but then the whole "God made us with free will so we could choose him or not" thing falls apart if we only have temporary free will here on earth.
Well, being a (albeit confused) christian, i have wondered this. If in the afterlife, how can god be so sure we will all be "good" Will we even HAVE free will? Adam and Eve had paradise, yet they messed it up. Was it totally satans fault? If so, can we assume humans can remain sinless in the afterlife? If not, then how can the afterlife truly be paradise if we are still capable of sin? Is satan the origionator of sin? If so, then can it be said i have no control over my sins becuase "satan made me do it" I think im beginning to see the many holes in Christianity.
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Old 03-02-2006, 02:03 PM   #23
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The Hebrew Bible claims that public relevation has only short-term success in the story of the Golden Calf. 40 days after a major revelation with displays of fire and booming voices they went and worshiped an other deity. (But they did not turn into atheists...)
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Old 03-02-2006, 02:35 PM   #24
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Adam and Eve had paradise, yet they messed it up. Was it totally satans fault?
Well think about it a minute...if they had no knowledge of good and evil whatesoever, until they ate the fruit, how could they know disobedience was bad (evil)?
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Old 03-02-2006, 03:25 PM   #25
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Originally Posted by nygreenguy
Well, being a (albeit confused) christian, i have wondered this. If in the afterlife, how can god be so sure we will all be "good" Will we even HAVE free will? Adam and Eve had paradise, yet they messed it up. Was it totally satans fault?
1. Satan does not appear in the story at all. The serpent was not Satan. It was just a talking snake.

2. Adam and Eve did not know right from wrong until after they ate the fruit, so how could they be blamed for it?

3. There was no Adam and Eve anyway, so hpw could humans inhereit sin from people who never existed?
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Old 03-02-2006, 06:25 PM   #26
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Originally Posted by mdarus
I don't blame you for being frustrated. The fundamentalist was not representing the normal Christian undertanding of the chronology. Most Christians believe (as you imply) that Satan's fall preceded Adam's.
Its not so much frustration as amazement at the lengths people will go to justify their beliefs. I believe I caught him off guard with that question. I have never heard a Christian respond to the problem of Satan (as the serpent) having sinned first and being in the garden, contrary to Paul's statement that Adam brought sin into the world. The fundamentalist realized that if he admitted Satan had sinned, then it proved that Paul was incorrect. Therefore, Satan couldn't have sinned.
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Old 03-03-2006, 05:59 AM   #27
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Originally Posted by richard2
Nope. Angels have free will according to Christians. I'm not sure where you picked up the idea that they don't.
From the fundy branch I came from, we were always taught that God's reasoning for creating man, was due to the fact that angels were created more as servants who lacked the capacity to accept or reject God. God created us because he wanted a being with the full ability to choose him, or deny him, and angels didn't cut it.

Regardless of what that passage really means, I think it's almost universally accepted that Lucifer was the the top dog of the angels, and led a third of them in a revolt against God. Thus the being 'cast out' of heaven, and becoming demons or devils or whatever it is they are now.

So, I still believe the fundamental problem for Christians is still there. If angels have free will, why make man? And if a being can know God, see God fully, and still reject him, what does that say for what is supposed to be the most awesome being conceivable?
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Old 03-03-2006, 06:54 AM   #28
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Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
1. Satan does not appear in the story at all. The serpent was not Satan. It was just a talking snake.
Satan is the snake in the story, this is pretty common knowledge. Remember, the bible isnt always literal. Satan is ofter reffered to as a "reptile" of sorts.
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Revelation 12:9
V9 And the great dragon was cast out, that old serpent, called the Devil, and Satan, which deceiveth the whole world: he was cast out into the earth, and his angels were cast out with him.
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2. Adam and Eve did not know right from wrong until after they ate the fruit, so how could they be blamed for it?
Well, if you truly have free will, shouldnt you know right from wrong? Or, because there WAS no wrong then, did they not know. either way, Adam was "perfect" and he did something wrong. He knew going against what god said was wrong.

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3. There was no Adam and Eve anyway, so hpw could humans inhereit sin from people who never existed?
They why even bother to post in the conversation if you think its all hokey. This is obviously directed at people who believe in angels, or those who want to actually contribute.
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Old 03-03-2006, 07:14 AM   #29
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Originally Posted by nygreenguy
Satan is the snake in the story, this is pretty common knowledge. Remember, the bible isnt always literal. Satan is ofter reffered to as a "reptile" of sorts.
No, the Revelation reference is written many centuries after Genesis. Whoever wrote Genesis never intended the snake to be Satan. As I am sure you know, Satan works with God in the OT, i.e. Job. The NT interprets the OT as it sees fit and in a way that generally doesn't reflect the ideas of the original OT writers.
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Well, if you truly have free will, shouldnt you know right from wrong? Or, because there WAS no wrong then, did they not know. either way, Adam was "perfect" and he did something wrong. He knew going against what god said was wrong.
Adam cannot both be perfect and do something wrong. Another pertinent question is, why did God put that tree there within easy reach of two people who didn't know right from wrong? And shouldn't an omniscient God know that they would eat from it? The story just has so many logical holes that one could grow as old as Methuselah listing them all out...

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Old 03-03-2006, 08:56 AM   #30
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Originally Posted by nygreenguy
Satan is the snake in the story, this is pretty common knowledge.
It is a common Christian belief but, for those who study the Hebrew Scriptures as an ancient text, it is "common knowledge" that this has been read into the fable which clearly describes the snake as a (talking and possibly walking) snake. That it is described as more "subtil" than any other beast certainly does not require or even suggest that he was something other than an animal.

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Well, if you truly have free will, shouldnt you know right from wrong?
The ability to choose does not imply or require the knowledge necessary to make the "right" choice.

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Adam was "perfect" and he did something wrong. He knew going against what god said was wrong.
How could he know the difference between right and wrong before eating of the fruit that provided that knowledge?
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