jmdrake
Member
- Joined
- Jun 6, 2007
- Messages
- 51,987
Okay. Think this through. Calvinist claim that if you believe that man has freewill to choose right from wrong then man somehow has the power to "thwart God's will" therefore man can't have freewill right?
Calvinists also believe that man's will didn't have a warped will bent against God until after the fall right?
Therefore Calvinists must believe that Adam and Eve had perfect wills. Yet they fell. So Adam and Eve somehow had the power to thwart God's will? If yes then why is it so hard for Calvinists to accept that people after the fall have the ability to thwart God's perfect will and choose sin just like Adam and Eve? If no, then doesn't that mean that Adam and Eve weren't perfect? Or maybe they were perfect in their imperfection and there was no "fall"? You can't have it both ways.
Further if perfect Adam and perfect Eve had a choice and could choose wrong (or in the alternative choose right) why not everyone else? Claiming it's all due to "fallen nature" doesn't cut it. A fallen nature simply means you have a bent toward sin. It does not mean an impossibility to make a choice. And if Adam didn't choose sin, if that sin was forced upon him, despite being in an unfallen state, then Paul is made a liar when he says "By one man did sin enter the world".
Calvinists also believe that man's will didn't have a warped will bent against God until after the fall right?
Therefore Calvinists must believe that Adam and Eve had perfect wills. Yet they fell. So Adam and Eve somehow had the power to thwart God's will? If yes then why is it so hard for Calvinists to accept that people after the fall have the ability to thwart God's perfect will and choose sin just like Adam and Eve? If no, then doesn't that mean that Adam and Eve weren't perfect? Or maybe they were perfect in their imperfection and there was no "fall"? You can't have it both ways.
Further if perfect Adam and perfect Eve had a choice and could choose wrong (or in the alternative choose right) why not everyone else? Claiming it's all due to "fallen nature" doesn't cut it. A fallen nature simply means you have a bent toward sin. It does not mean an impossibility to make a choice. And if Adam didn't choose sin, if that sin was forced upon him, despite being in an unfallen state, then Paul is made a liar when he says "By one man did sin enter the world".