Wednesday, November 25, 2015

"Excuse me, I'm having trouble finding this nonsense in my Bible"

Tomorrow or late tonight I will be putting up a Thanksgiving post at What's Wrong With the World, and I will link that from here as well. But just before that, I wanted to put this amusing meme out there. I was reminded of it by this post  at Calvinistic Cartoons that mentioned women's ordination--a subject on which I share Eddie Eddings's opinion. (Disclaimer: I'm not a Calvinist even though I link Calvinistic Cartoons.)



19 comments:

  1. I absolutely love it! I, for one, am glad that Piper is not hyper.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hi Lydia, why aren't you a Calvinist?

    ReplyDelete
  3. Any Christian tries his best to figure out, putting together Scripture with reason, what theological views make the most sense. Calvinists and Arminians and Molinists all do this to the best of their ability. Let's just say that when I do that, what I come up with isn't Calvinism.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Fair enough. What do you come up with?

    ReplyDelete
  5. Some version of Arminianism or Molinism. I usually say that I'm a Molinist, but a friend tells me I'm not doctrinaire enough about the order of decrees to be a real Molinist.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks Lydia,

      Have you read Steve Hays' work on both Arminianism and Molinism? I think he handles both very well.

      What's your objection to Calvinism? Let's say, the primary one? And I'm not referring to hyper Calvinism.

      Don't worry, I don't intend to get in a long drawn out discussion that ends no where and neither you nor I have time for. Thanks!

      Delete
  6. Hi Lydia, could you direct me to any helpful resources on the Calvinism debate? Thank you!

    ReplyDelete
  7. Not really. It's something I mainly think through on my own and in conversation with others rather than a topic I read a lot on. I believe William Lane Craig has some useful material on Molinism and soteriology. You might google that up.

    (My own soteriology has been strongly influenced by C.S. Lewis's _The Great Divorce_. It was through reading that book that I first started asking myself why, as a good Baptist, I put such a huge emphasis upon the importance of a person's decision to "receive Jesus Christ as personal Savior" but nonetheless insisted in an a priori fashion that a person could never lose his salvation by his own decision to reject Christ if he had _really_ "received Jesus Christ as personal Savior" in the first place. The position I had been raised with--a kind of semi-Calvinist point-in-time salvationism, came to seem to me ad hoc when it came to the issue of apostasy.)

    ReplyDelete
  8. I have started reading Triablogue a lot more regularly lately, but I can't say that I focus on the Calvinism threads particularly. He's an interesting writer, though I occasionally would find his posts a little easier to read if they had more of a flow to them. (I speak as an offender myself. I sometimes write posts more in that same "bullet point" style that I'm criticizing a bit here.) In very broad terms, I would say that Steve and I respect each other but interpret various Scripture verses differently and don't get into scrapping over it.

    My primary objections to Calvinism are that compatibilism is philosophically incoherent, while strict determinism (of humans) is inconsistent with the evidence of introspection, philosophical reflection, and Scripture. Libertarian free agency is, in my opinion, the only tenable game in town.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Thanks Lydia. I wish I could pick your brain with regard to why you think compatibilism is philosophically incoherent, but I'm sure that would push the conversation beyond the pale of this post. I don't see how introspection, et al, is inconsistent with compatibilism.

    ReplyDelete
  10. I think the "freedom" postulated by compatibilism is not real freedom. I suppose one could say in that case that, rather than being incoherent, the position collapses into a version of determinism after all--just determinism in which the one doing the determining manipulates things at some earlier, but nonetheless irresistible, level, thus (as in all determinism) reducing the agent to a conduit of causes other than himself. I would accept that as a way of seeing what is wrong with compatibilism. But to the extent that the compatibilist insists that he is talking about real, robust freedom, the position is simply incoherent.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Although I didn't actually claim (in the above comment) that introspection shows compatibilism to be wrong (that was what I said about determinism), introspection works well with real-life examples to undermine the sufficiency of the compatibilist account of freedom. For example, if I am breaking my diet and eating too much because I am enslaved to my passion for a particular type of food (and will later regret having eaten so much), to some degree I am unfree, even though at the moment that I'm eating I'm acting upon my genuine desires. So the compatibilist notion of freedom as acting upon one's own desires is radically insufficient.

    ReplyDelete
  12. But your objection doesn't undermine a person's free agency. A free agent may pursue any decision his heart desires and from his own perspective be as free as a feather in the wind. However, given compatibilism, God is operating on a higher plain (e.g. Acts 2:23)

    I don't think compatibilism equals determinism.

    ReplyDelete
  13. I disagree that doing what you desire to do is a sufficiently robust and meaningful notion of freedom. That was my point.

    ReplyDelete
  14. Hmmm. What would you say is a sufficiently robust and meaningful notion of freedom? would that be "the freedom to do otherwise"? If so, how could free agents act in ways that are contrary to their nature?

    Also, how do you square libertarian free agency with Acts 2:23?

    ReplyDelete
  15. I would say that agent causation is a sufficiently robust and meaningful notion of freedom.

    I see no tension at all between libertarian free agency and Acts 2:23 or any verse in the Bible that mentions the plans of God, the foreknowledge of God, the counsel and purpose of God, etc. As to foreknowledge, as has been shown philosophically time and time again, there is not the slightest problem with God's knowing, with certainty, everything that will happen, and the freedom of the actors in the fullest, most "Arminian" sense of freedom. As to plan, I see no reason to take a term like "counsel" or "plan" or "purpose" of God to mean that God literally controls what happens--whatever term the compatibilist wants to use for his notion of God's sovereignty. We can see this at the human level. If I plan for Bob and Ann to get married because I think they are well-suited and even nudge this plan along by introducing them, I can say later when they get married that it all happened according to my plan, but there is no tension at all between this and libertarian free agency on the part of Bob and Ann. Similarly, God the Father sent God the Son to be incarnate. God the Son incarnate, Jesus Christ, taught certain things and said certain things to the Jewish rulers. He knew what they would do and what Pilate would do. It all happened "according to God's plan." But this no more means that God was controlling their acts at a higher level or that they were not agent causes, free in a non-Calvinist sense, than it does in the case of my introducing Bob and Ann. The biggest difference is God's perfect knowledge of what will happen (and also his perfect knowledge of counterfactuals about free creatures), but perfect knowledge in no way requires a Calvinist view.

    ReplyDelete
  16. I'll have to chew on that for a while. Thanks Lydia!

    ReplyDelete
  17. I'd like to ask CM Granger what they think determinism IS, if compatibilism is not determinism? Monergism.com (https://www.monergism.com/topics/free-will/compatibilism), a Calvinist website, notes that "this position is no less deterministic than hard determinism - be clear that neither soft nor hard determinism believes man has a free will. Our choices are only our choices because they are voluntary, not coerced."

    But leaving aside that...it seems you recognize that, whatever words you choose to use, God DOES "determine" all actions. (You admit that "God is operating on a higher plain.")Therefore, the only difference between compatibilism and your version of "Determinism" (Whatever that might be) seems to be that in compatibilism, man is merely UNAWARE that his actions (as well as his desires, motivations, emotions, and everything else about him) are determined, and BELIEVES them to be the result of his own free will.

    But surely that perception has no bearing on whether his actions are, in fact, DETERMINED by God? Sure, his actions are just as determined, and therefore compatibilism just as deterministic, as if he were fully aware that he was being manipulated by a power outside himself?

    ReplyDelete
  18. Anonymous said,

    Hi Lydia, could you direct me to any helpful resources on the Calvinism debate? Thank you!

    For the Arminian side of things, I would recommend The Society of Evangelical Arminians:

    http://evangelicalarminians.org/

    For a site that features a lot of back in forth in the comments section of posts that deal with the A/C debate, I recommend my site (though I rarely have time to post anymore). Just click on my name to go to my site (Arminian Perspectives).

    Both sites have tons of resources dealing with the A/C debate.

    ReplyDelete