Below
is an excerpt addressing the subject of divine causation and
compatibilism. This has been adapted from a series of responses I
recently shared with some non-Calvinist Christians who have taken an
incompatibilist position (i.e. their belief is that God's
pre-determination of everything is incompatible with human freedom of
choice and moral responsibility). I argue here for the opposite view,
that God's sovereign pre-determination of everything is perfectly
compatible with human freedom of choice and moral responsibility for our
actions.
Dear Non-Calvinist friends:
Dear Non-Calvinist friends:
You present an
interesting argument. The main thrust seems to be that Reformed theology
makes God the author of evil, and in so doing removes man's freedom and
moral responsibility. This objection is not new; it has been a common
challenge faced by Calvinistic thinkers for centuries. I believe the
argument is flawed, and I will explain why in detail. First, here is a
summary:
- The argument fails to distinguish between hyper Calvinism and mainstream Calvinism
- The argument is based on a faulty understanding of mainstream Calvinism, which affirms compatibilism rather than mere determinism.
- The argument is based on a faulty understanding of compatibilism, which affirms human freedom and responsibility in addition to determinism.
- The argument groundlessly assumes compatibilism is impossible and self-contradictory.
- The argument is based rationalism rather than a sound, Biblical epistemology (theory of knowledge)
- The argument gives undue credit to the human mind's ability to peer into the unrevealed.
- The Argument fails to present a Biblically and logically sound alternative to the Reformed approach, which it rejects based on multiple misunderstandings.
Historically, Calvinists
have taken a variety of positions, from a VERY SOFT compatibilism to a
VERY HARD determinism. You have quoted from several examples of this
diversity. A.W. Pink (depending on the day of the week), Vincent Cheung
and Gordon Clark are in the line of the more hyper brand of Calvinists,
who are most likely to espouse the hardest form of determinism without
apology. You extol this as being somehow
more “consistent.” Others like Piper, Packer and Frame are more likely
to express a compatibilism that affirms human freedom as a mystery
within (and even upheld by) divine ordination. I have read Calvin’s
discussion of free will in the Institutes; he is a textbook
compatibilist, at least in that part of his writings. Continue at Theoparadox
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