Brother it is not my desire to change your mind or heart about your perception of free Will.
Thank you Rajesh for your kind response.
What I am addressing is what I find problematic or perhaps what I find missing in your understanding of free will in regards to what you have presented for consumption on this thread. I have asked for you to re-consider the definitive assertion that without a free will we are simply robots. I believe it is a mistake to say that, and I have respectfully pointed out why I do not find the assertion to be a valid dichotomy pertaining to the term "free". To be clear, a true dichotomy would be a free will as opposed to an enslaved will or a will that is not subjugate as opposed to a will that is subjugate. Those are true dichotomies suitable for supporting a sound reasoning.
According to me the entire premise of Salvation rests on that CHOICE, our volition if you will, whether we wish to do evil or accept the Lord as our savior and follow Him.
Okay, but isn't confessing the Christ about believing from the heart? Wouldn't displaying a Love that would choose to suffer a zealous cruelty and scorn, and death on a cross for the sake of sinners, have anything to do towards moving someone to believe from the heart? I would testify that it requires a spiritual revelation to believe in the Christ. I cannot not believe and then believe again according to my own discretion. And nor can you if you have the Holy Spirit. Moreover scripture also testifies that it requires the Holy Spirit to confess Christ as Lord. This statement is true:
True worship is drawn out by the object of worship.
I believe we were given a free will to choose good or evil.
When and
by whom were we given this so called "ability" to choose to do good or evil, or by extension the thought that we can choose for ourselves in opposition to God? The way I see it, obedience to God is based on faith or trust in His Holy Character and always has been. It certainly has never been based on the existence of any perceived ability of equal opportunity to disobey, which in reality would simply be the distrusting of God through any false premise wherein we might presume to think we know better than God.
We can choose to be good, bad or ugly. And every choice we make has a consequence. Therefore how can we not have a free will to choose the actions, words, and thoughts (what we elect to think).
Since when do we decide what we will think? If I say I won't think of a brown cow, will I have not thought of one? We're supposed to examine every thought and whether they are of Christ. If I hear a voice saying that I can choose to do evil according to my own discretion, I don't believe it's Christ.
Of course our choices will have consequences, but that doesn't mean that we always see the consequences of our choices before we make them. Otherwise there can be no true repentance. For example, one cannot truly repent if they are not truly sorry. And if they are truly sorry, then they would not have done it in the first place had they known the suffering that they would be handing to others before hand. That is if they care. After all, all moral/immoral choices are about how our choices will effect our fellow man. And that is precisely why there is no free will (self determination) in the moral purview. Philippians 2:13. Love is what directs our will to do what is good and restricts us from doing evil. The point is that God is Love and we do become abominations apart from His Spirit since there is only carnal impetus otherwise. One cannot even be sorry without Love, and it is actually love that compels our Godly sorrow and not our volition. Sorrow is not voluntary and neither is repentance. We are not supposed to think that we decided to do good or be good or even presume we can. We are supposed to thank God for His Word which guides our reasoning and does not give value to any vanity which is of the flesh. Therefore we cannot have a free will morally speaking, unless the term is meant to denote a will free from the slavery of sin.
I believe the Lord continually searches hearts of men and women, minutely observing every choice we make, every word we speak, and every thought that we think. Yes sir I believe at times we are under a scanner!
I agree with you here. But with as much humility as God has afforded me, I would point out that this is why I have carefully considered that there is a difference between being seen by God as thinking and believing that God's Spirit is what makes a man good, wherein I am truly thankful for his wisdom, and being seen by God as believing and thinking that it is through my volition that I volunteer to be good, lest God punish me.
Thank you for your discourse, and I hope we can come to an understanding, speaking and teaching the same things in Christs' Name, Jesus.