I put forth this issue as the issue, because this is what Arminians such as Roger Olson of the society of Evangelical Arminians has said is the issue, and I quote, "Real Arminianism has always believed in human freedom for one main reason—to protect the goodness of God and thus God’s reputation in a world filled with evil. There is only one reason classical Arminian theology emphasizes free will, but it has two sides. First, to protect and defend God’s goodness; second to make clear human responsibility for sin and evil."That is not really the main issue.
Please consider how you come across to me Malachi. Above you seem to think Adam should deserve blame. But I myself would never ever pass such judgment without being absolutely sure it was deserved. That to me is what righteous judgment is all about. Why should Adam be blamed? And to be precise, keep in mind this is about 'freewill', so that when I say blame it is clear it amounts to condemnation for something Adam knowingly could have and should have avoided. And to be even more precise, the blamer/accuser of Adam must be certain beyond and doubt, that if put in Adam's shoes, he would have not done what Adam did. I can't in all honesty make that claim and that is why I can't blame Adam. In fact God has shown me, that many times I have been deceived by Satan into doing something I otherwise wouldn't have done.And if anyone should be blamed it is Adam.
Respectfully Malachi, you can't conflate a 'free' gift with a 'free' response. A free gift pertains to something that is not be bought, hence it is free. The free response from a freewill has nothing to do with not buying a response.It is God Himself who desires that the offer of salvation be freely responded to because it is a free gift (Isa 55:1-7).
You are implying that Genesis 1:26-27 is to be interpreted as being given a freewill because we are made in God's image. God's image pertains to a resemblance of God. Here's the problem, freewill theology is saying men freely choose or volunteer to sin. Yet God can't sin. So you can't claim that being made in God's image constitutes the free ability to sin. God gave us a will, this will became corrupted through a corrupt image of god. It may have been a freewill in the sense it was free from corruption at the time it was made, but God did not give us the disability to sin, Satan did that. 1 John 3:8.And in any event He created men (Gen 1:26,27) and angels with free will for His own eternal purposes.
Think about what you are saying about yourself. Note that the second great commandment is to love others as you would want to be loved, right? That means to deliberately transgresses against this commandment is to deliberately desire to hurt others. All sin hurts somebody. I honestly don't ever want to deliberately hurt anybody, so I am never going to be a proponent of freewill theology. Nor do I think anybody else would want to hurt anybody else, since I don't. Unless of course they were deceived in some manner, or forced into it by circumstance, wherein freewill is not applicable. The truth is that sin is irrational. So what are you saying? That you have a freewill that can volunteer to hurt others? That this is autonomy?