The Tradition of Human Free Will, the Bible, & Logic

5 months ago
15

Advocates of the free will myth (i.e., the notion that the wills of men are not predestinated by God, but free to choose contrary to what God has eternally determined to take place) will say anything to establish their fantasy and their idolatrous worship of man's will (i.e., humanism and autonomy).
Free willers—those advocating for the myth of free will—have to make up something, for their claims are NOT found in Holy Scripture.
One standard idiotic claim by free willers is that commands infer ability. So, when the Bible commands a person to believe the Gospel, the free willer fallaciously thinks: "This means I can believe the Gospel. Thus, I have free will."
Recently, a free willer advocating the heresy of "Compatibilism" (i.e., the false notion that God's absolute predestination and human free will are not only both taught in the Bible, but are also logically compatible with each other) made the following stupid claim: "Commands do not imply ability for unbelievers, but they do imply ability for those who believe the Gospel."

#freewill
#predestination

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