The idea of "free will" seems to be going the rounds at the moment.
The idea seems to raise its head as some sort of justification for "judgement" and I was reflecting on this from my own perspective. It does seem to me that in many ways the conservative/fundamentalist perspective compromises the whole concept. It seems that it is only the exercise of choice/free will when it comes to "accepting Christ" that has any real meaning.
A human being could choose the ethically sound throughout their existence, yet if the decision for "Christ" is not made, they are damned. Alternatively, a human being could indulge themselves throughout their life, causing great suffering and discord, yet at the very end "repent" and "choose Christ" and they are "saved.
And again, it seems the value of free will/choice has no need to extend into the after-life. No "free will" exists here! Only its consequences. Eternal joy or eternal suffering. Apparently "God" no longer values the idea of free will! Those in heaven are perfect yet without it (in as much as the possibilty of losing "salvation" is no longer an option), while those in hell are unable to choose annihilation/non-existence.
So "free will" is a great value, yet we only have it for one short ambiguous life that lasts for "three score years and ten" - if we are lucky............And the ethical acts performed and freely chosen by those "outside of Christ" are mere "dirty rags" in the sight of the Almighty!
I may misunderstand. Personally I live with the subjective experience of freedom...............whatever the reality may or may not be concerning "free will/determinism". And I live as being "grasped never to be abandoned" by Infinite Compassion. I can make mistakes within the embrace of such a Compassion without fear of any form of rejection. Thats the end of it. I must admit to finding certain Christian beliefs and expressions more and more obscure.........
The idea seems to raise its head as some sort of justification for "judgement" and I was reflecting on this from my own perspective. It does seem to me that in many ways the conservative/fundamentalist perspective compromises the whole concept. It seems that it is only the exercise of choice/free will when it comes to "accepting Christ" that has any real meaning.
A human being could choose the ethically sound throughout their existence, yet if the decision for "Christ" is not made, they are damned. Alternatively, a human being could indulge themselves throughout their life, causing great suffering and discord, yet at the very end "repent" and "choose Christ" and they are "saved.
And again, it seems the value of free will/choice has no need to extend into the after-life. No "free will" exists here! Only its consequences. Eternal joy or eternal suffering. Apparently "God" no longer values the idea of free will! Those in heaven are perfect yet without it (in as much as the possibilty of losing "salvation" is no longer an option), while those in hell are unable to choose annihilation/non-existence.
So "free will" is a great value, yet we only have it for one short ambiguous life that lasts for "three score years and ten" - if we are lucky............And the ethical acts performed and freely chosen by those "outside of Christ" are mere "dirty rags" in the sight of the Almighty!
I may misunderstand. Personally I live with the subjective experience of freedom...............whatever the reality may or may not be concerning "free will/determinism". And I live as being "grasped never to be abandoned" by Infinite Compassion. I can make mistakes within the embrace of such a Compassion without fear of any form of rejection. Thats the end of it. I must admit to finding certain Christian beliefs and expressions more and more obscure.........