But the choice Adam and Eve made, and the choice Lucifer made before them, was the choice they were going to make. It was the case that they were going to make that choice from before they were created. And God could have created them such that they would have not made that choice.
That's your opinion. But it's not biblical.
Joshua 24:15
But if serving the LORD seems undesirable to you, then choose for yourselves this day whom you will serve, whether the gods your forefathers served beyond the River, or the gods of the Amorites, in whose land you are living. But as for me and my household, we will serve the LORD."
If man wasn't created with the ability to make a choice, God would not have admonished men through Joshua to choose Him.
As for Lucifer:
Ezekiel 28:14,15
14Thou art the anointed cherub that covereth; and I have set thee so: thou wast upon the holy mountain of God; thou hast walked up and down in the midst of the stones of fire.
15Thou wast perfect in thy ways from the day that thou wast created, till iniquity was found in thee.
The Bible is clear. Lucifer was created perfect. The iniquity that was found in him was
not part of that perfection. I know that those who believe in predestination try to explain away clear Biblical teaching that contradicts it and frankly I grow weary in these debates. But the Bible is 100% clear on this. Adam and Eve had freewill. The knuckleheaded Israelites that Joshua was talking to had free will. Lucifer had free will.
My points aren't based on a picture of God, either loving as I would wish to define loving, or sado-masochistic as I would wish to define sado-masochistic, just on logic itself. I don't claim to understand God, or how this all works. Nor do I feel any need to fill in the details with a picture of my own creation.
Part of the reason God created man in His likeness is to have intelligent creatures who could grow daily to better understand His nature. That's why Jesus in parables told those who He cast into outer darkness
I never knew you. And there's no need for you to define God as loving. The Bible already declares God to be the definition of love.
1 John 4:7,8 Beloved, let us love one another, for love is of God; and everyone who loves is born of God and knows God. 8 He who does not love does not know God, for God is love.
The picture of God that you attempt to perpetuate is not of a loving God, but of a God that purposefully creates creatures for their on downfall just so that He can die for some of them. That's not only unbiblical, it makes no sense. And it's not love. Because God declared Himself to be love, our attempts to explain what God does has to be grounded in who He says He is.
Understanding the basic truth that God is love is Christianity 101. Before people delve into different theological debates, if they don't understand God's nature based on what He declares about Himself then they will forever bark up the wrong tree.
Edit: To put what I'm saying in the context of this thread, if I understand the argument you originally made against Clay, it was that, in order for God to prevent evil from existing, he would have had to eliminate the possibility of his creatures choosing to do evil, and in order to do this, he would have to eliminate their free will. Perhaps I'm reading between the lines here. If that's not what you were saying, please clarify.
That is correct. The only way to prevent someone from ever choosing evil,
something that before evil was created nobody understood the consequences of would be to create creatures without free will. Now those free will creatures have had a chance to see the consequences of sin and made a free will choice to reject sin. For those of us on earth we've had to make that choice on faith without the benefit of even knowing 100% that God even exists.
But later in the thread, you conceded that there can be a situation where the possibility of choosing evil is eliminated, even with creatures retaining free will.
Stop right there. Did you even read what I wrote in post # 146? Did you understand the point I was making about immunity as well as the point about the epigenome? If you did then you shouldn't still be confused. We're talking about people who have already made a freewill choice and rejected sin, seen the full consequences of sin, seen the glory of the restoration after sin, and received new bodies no longer tainted by sin. Sure they
could choose sin again, but why on earth
would they? At the resurrection God simply fully empowers people to do
what they've already chosen to do. That is
totally different from God creating creatures without freewill.