Slavery is a creature with free will using force to deprive another creature of free will. If a dog has free will, and you domesticate it, that's not slavery. If a dog has free will, and you put it on a leash, put it in a cage, or otherwise restrict it from leaving, then yea - that's slavery. If dogs don't have free will, then none of its slavery and you can do whatever I guess. Then sure, eat the dogs, eat the cats. But if they have free will that changes the equation.
I have no idea if animals have "free will" or not, but they certainly don't have the capacity to make deliberative choices in the sense that humans do.
The reason that domesticing an animal is not "slavery" is because domestication is suitable to the animal's nature. It is not suitable to enslave a human being because it is blasphemy against God.
I don't care about dignity, I care about sovereignty. If you're using those two words interchangeably, then you're raising separate questions with that explanation. But as I'm not sure exactly what you mean by dignity, I'll hold my questions on that.
Dignity and sovereignty are not the same. Man is not sovereign in respect to God. God is sovereign over all, which is the same as saying that God is supreme over all (John 10:29)
I'm not clear on what you're trying to say here. Are you saying that people will eventually voluntarily kneel? Previously you said that hell was eternal because people don't change their minds.
Everyone will kneel. Today, only those kneel who do so willingly. We know that not everyone will willingly bow (Scripture says so), so the current condition will change some time in the future.
Everyone will bow before Jesus, no exceptions.
The more common interpretation of Phillippians 2 is that people will be compelled to kneel.
In future, yes. It's the only possible reading of the text.
Whether that happens now, or later, it's still slavery. And the fact that it hasn't happened yet, isn't really an excuse.
Not saying it's an excuse. Rather, you have the
opportunity to willingly bow, now. That opportunity window is coming to a close at some point in the future, at a time unknown to us, but known to God.
Which is your view, and how do you explain the discrepancy?
There is no discrepancy. If you want to call God's supremacy, in itself, "slavery", I don't know what to say to you. You are supreme in respect to an animal, does your mere existence somehow magically "enslave" the animal? Obviously not. Even if you believe you should respect an animal's "choices", insofar as we can perceive them, and you try not to interfere with animals, you are still supreme in respect to the animals because you have the capacity to dominate them (weapons, traps, cages, etc.) In the same way, God's supremacy is a fact of his being... he
just is supreme over all, he is greater than all. He is supreme over you whether or not he "interferes" with your "free will".
God says he delegates authority over the animals in Gen 1:26-28. Not necessarily authority over man.
I don't understand what you seem to be trying to clarify -- that's exactly what I said above, go re-read for comprehension.
Other passages suggest that God is the sole authority over men
Yes, God is the sole authority over all creation. Somehow, I get the feeling I'm arguing with chatbot copy-pasta...
Then there's also God meddling with Kings on earth Proverbs 8:15-16.
See again Dan. 4:35. God does whatever he wants. That follows from the whole supreme thing.
How can man be sovereign over earth while at the same time, God is giving his decrees to Kings and Queens?
Once again, you are conflating pre-lapsarian and post-lapsarian orders. In the pre-lapsarian order, no man bowed to any other man. God
delegated rule over the earthly creatures to Adam and Eve (co-regency). You do understand the meaning of the word "delegate"? When someone who has authority delegates some
part of that authority to another person, such as when a king deputizes an ambassador for some task or goal, that is called
delegation. God has power over all of heaven and earth and the underworld. In Eden, he delegated the rule over the earthly creatures to Adam and Eve. After the fall, the situation is more complicated because Adam, Eve and the Serpent inverted God's good order. God instituted a temporary order after the fall and that is the order we currently live under.
What I'm more worried about, is if God intends to "free me from slavery" by making me kneel.
Who is making anyone kneel? All who believe in Jesus kneel before him freely.
Last I checked, mathematics never used force to compel me to kneel. Mathematics doesn't have free will so by definition it can't enslave anything.
The metaphor is that mathematics is unalterable, it just is what it is. In the same way God's being is unalterable, it just is what it is. Complaining about something in God's being that you don't like, is like bitching about 2+2 summing to 4. Grow up and get over it.
It's like if a tree falls over and traps me under its weight, I'm not enslaved by that tree, because that tree has no free will. It has no idea what it's doing.
There you go, God is like that tree, except he's aware of what he's doing. However, because God's decrees are perfect, the only way he could do something
other than what he's doing, is to be less than perfect. Therefore, God's decrees are unalterable and unarguable, just as the tree pinning you to the ground. It just is so, and the most we can do is cope with it and try our best to understand it, as far as we are able.
If you're saying God is purely a math equation
I am not. I am saying that God's being is perfect and unalterable in the same kind of way that a true math equation is perfect and unalterable. You cannot alter the statement 2+2=4 to something other than 4, without introducing a contradiction. In the same way, God's being and decree could not be altered, even if he wanted to, because he would thereby make himself less than absolute perfection. This is theology 101 -- "God is that being than which none greater can be conceived." -- Anselm.
But if God does have free will, and he uses that free will to force me to live under his unquestionable rule, yea - that's slavery.
Except nobody who believes the Gospel feels this way... so that's like billions and billions of people... versus you. What are these billions of believers overlooking? Clearly, there is something very basic that you have understood but which has escaped the rest of us... please share it.
I'm fine with God being supreme. If he leaves me alone to my own devices, I have no problem with him.
OK, sure, so what you
really value is your peace and freedom. The whole point of the Gospel is to secure our freedom (John 8:36, Gal. 5:1) and to give us God's peace (Gal. 5:22,23, John 14:27).
But if he forces his will over me in any way that is not mathematically required, then we've got a problem.
Here you've conceded the point -- "that is not mathematically required". God is so fanatically committed to justice that he sacrificed his own Son to make salvation possible. That is the most radical conceivable commitment to justice and righteousness, so radical that the mere act of him doing it causes people to feel skeptical about it. How could anyone be that mad?? But God's commitment to his holiness, justice and righteousness is beyond madness, and he has manifested this commitment in the Gospel. Nobody cares more about freedom in the sense of the freedom to act righteously, than God does.
Yea, I'll go to war with God if he declares war on me by trying to make me kneel.
But you've tipped your hand below... this really isn't about freedom, it's about sin. You will not give up sin, so that is why you have to go to war with God. Which is basically the entire story of the Bible from Genesis 3 forward.
The only other reason I'd go to war with God would be to seek reparative justice. And by that I mean, if it's within his power, I would demand that he restore me to the state I was in before he created me. And if that's not within his power, or if he wasn't actually responsible for my creation, then fine I can accept that.
Not to be rude, but these are the ravings of someone who has no idea what he is speaking about.
How does that make me a mass murderer?
Because the only thing that keeps you from falling into the most vicious form of evil, is whatever grace that God continues to show to you. Refusing to submit to God (which is tantamount to rebelling against him and going to war with him) is to reject God's grace, thus choosing universal violence and hostility.
I just want God to leave me alone, to just let me live in my pit of vile and sin.
I like greed, I like lust, I like sloth, I like gluttony.
If that makes me "evil", then I guess I just want to be evil.
Here, we have the confession. This is what the debate is
really about. Greed, lust, sloth, gluttony... these are not "neutral", these are hostile. These are the opposite of
Love your neighbor as you love yourself, which summarizes the law of God (Matt. 22:39,40).