Postmaster said:
This is a confusing matter for me
Are humans independent of God and his will? But how can that be if God is everything and part of everyone and governs and created all life? If God knows everything in advance and sometimes even people themselves can predict things before they happen, what is the point of us performing life? Is independence of God free will? Does making a bond with God mean giving up free will?
I'll give this my best shot- but yeah, this is one of those confusing and oft-debated issues.
I do not believe anything is independent of God, because God is the Life behind all life. Or as one Christian put it (forgetting who)- "God is the ground of Being on which all being rests." However, I think we have free will, and that it is independent of His will.
How can that be? Well, I don't think God "governs" all life in an immediate sense. I think He created life in such a way that it continues on its own accord. I do think God is omniscient, but knowing everything and
causing everything are two different things. And I don't think people get glimpses of what
will happen, but rather what
will happen if... That is, under the current courses of action, such and such will result. But I don't think anything is inevitable except the proverbial death and taxes. I don't think that everything that happens is according to God's will or plan. I think we can choose whether to follow His will or not. Otherwise, we would have to conclude that all sorts of evil actions are part of God's will, and I don't think that is the case. I don't think Hitler was acting in accordance with God's will, for example. I believe that thinking everything is "as it should be" is abdicating our own responsibility to act in accordance with the will of the Father, as it was revealed to us through the Gospel of Jesus Christ. God has a plan, but it's up to us and our own free will to seek to be guided by it, and we can do otherwise. I do think God can work good through evil actions, but it is not His will to have the evil actions occur, but rather the case of making metaphysical lemonade out of lemons, of being faithful to His people no matter what. That doesn't mean the lemons were meant to be. Furthermore, I think we as humans misunderstand what omniscience is. We tend to think of time as linear- because for us it seems that it is. We are born, grow up, grow old, and die. We go to first grade, then second, and so on. But God exists outside time and space. So His omniscience is not so much seeing what
will happen, but rather seeing all that ever happened and ever will happen at once, in every moment. At least, this is what I believe. So past/present/future is more a function of us being alive in this particular physical reality than some sort of foundation for all Reality. Time is relative.
I do not think indepence of God is free will, nor do I think being connected to God is giving up free will. If it was, those who gave themselves to God would be perfect, just as God is, because their bodies would be entirely animated by God's will rather than their own. But all who are bonded to God know that the road is still often a difficult one to tread, requiring patience and self-control. I think one has free will whether or not one connects with God. But when we have a relationship with God, we find that we want to please Him and to serve others. We recognize that God's plans are better informed than our own, and so we seek to do His will. We find that the path of best action is the one that resonates with God. So, out of our free will, we consciously seek ever more to pour out our own desires and plans for His will, to become Christ's hands and feet and eyes on earth. Yet we do so out of free will to the end of our days, and beyond. God created us as beings with free will and independent thought, and that is what we are- it is intrinsic to our being.