I want to  be clear about this one thing brothers, if God is not constrained by   shared reality then there is no point in claiming that God is good or  that he is loving or merciful. By making claims such as these, it is  always implied that the words you use have the same meaning when applied  to God as they do in the common understanding.
 
When I say  ‘constrained’ I don’t mean that God is not almighty. Of course he is  almighty. He is as powerful as he needs to be to accomplish his  purposes.  But what I mean is that if for example he had decided to  cause a church to grow up in a certain town but there were some evil  people there who didn’t want any church in their town, God is capable of  destroying those evil people or thwarting their plans as easy as  batting an eyelid. The point about constraint is that the presence of  such evil people constrains God. He can’t cause the church to grow in  that town without first getting rid of the evil guys.  He can’t just  imagine the church there and lo and behold it is, because the evil guys  are 
real. Plus, God can’t even 
want to start a church in a certain town  unless that town existed in the first place. The very existence of the  town is a pre-condition of him desiring to build a church there. So even  though God is easily powerful enough to handle any situation, every act  of his that has anything to do with his creation, is an act that has a  context that must be respected. I thought that The Incredible Platypus  already stated this well and no one appears to have disputed it:
 
	
		
	
	
		
		
			We  are not completely free beings. We cannot simply do whatever we want  when we want. If we could, then no one could judge us, because  effectively, the universe is your playground. Or to put it another way,  if anyone did judge us, that judgement would be worthless. You would  define what right and wrong is.
We are under all sorts of  restrictions and constraints that prevent us from doing things. This  means that we have to make choices between several courses of action.  These choices have to be meaningful of course. That is, the effect of  choosing one course of action is different to the effect of another  course of action.
If, in the manner I described above, a building is  in a city is worthless to you, then for all the difference it made, you  could walk through it as if it were thin air. As far as you are  concerned, it does not exist.
Of course in the real world, value does  not work like this. Every object and person has a value (in the sense I  described above) to you simply by being there. You may not care whether  something is there or not, but this will not change the fact that it  is.
		
		
	 
So it is clear that when we ask the question, ‘Is God moral?’, we are using the word ‘moral’ 
in the commonly understood sense  of consistently acting morally or with integrity and goodness. However,  if we cannot say that God is real, then we can neither say that he is  moral. Because the language we use implies a consistent 
reality. This  conclusion is unpalatable to dualists such as Calvinists and some  orthodox and Catholics because of course they would like to be able to  say that God is moral.
Why would they like to say this?  The following passage is very illuminating:
 
Matthew 21:23-26
	
	
		
		
			23 When He entered the temple, the chief priests and the elders of the people came to Him while He was teaching, and said, “By what authority are You doing these things, and who gave You this authority?” 
24 Jesus said to them, “I will also ask you one 
[d]thing, which if you tell Me, I will also tell you by what authority I do these things. 
25 The baptism of John was from what 
source, from heaven or from men?” And they 
began reasoning among themselves, saying, “If we say, ‘From heaven,’ He will say to us, ‘Then why did you not believe him?’ 
26 But if we say, ‘From men,’ we fear the 
[e]people; for they all regard John as a prophet.” 
27 And answering Jesus, they said, “We do not know.” He also said to them, “Neither will I tell you by what authority I do these things.
		
 
		
	 
The  bigwigs didn’t like to put in words the real consequences of their  beliefs because it would be unpalatable to the crowds. Calvinists don’t  want to admit that it is a consequence of their belief system that God  is not moral. But this is exactly what their belief system implies. It  is unavoidable. This is quite apart from their doctrine that 
everything, both good and bad,  that happens in the world, is his will. Surely, this cannot be clearer?  For how can a God who wills both good and bad be held to be anything  other than totally amoral? This is what they don’t want to tell you  explicitly.
 
Sometimes, however, it does happen that a Calvinist  will admit to these conclusions. B57 for example often claims that God  does not love everyone, nor is it his purpose to save everyone. I’m  afraid I can’t quote a reference for that because the relevant post was  deleted in the cull a few months back. The Calvinist view of God as  amoral comes across clearly there. Nearer at home, we have a similar  admission from Lon, where he states that we, like a bowling ball, have  no say in what we do in life and that everything is the work of God:
 
	
		
	
	
		
		
			Yes  'limit' means closed/stopped. Wherever the end of the rope reaches, is  completely knowable. Relationship both opens up what doesn't exist, but  it also closes other doors. I completely know, everything I've ever  created. There can't be an accident happening to my creation. It is all  my work.
Which describes God (the bowlerama that is constant) and  me the bowler, with what I can and can't do. The alley isn't going to  see anything different and will know before I release the ball what is  going to happen next. So, again, even the Open View is logically capable  and seeing that the system is fully knowable.
Sure, but where  that is a constrain to you and I, it is not to God. Limited example: He  can be at the play AND at the game. You and I are stuck with a  limitation. For us, it is closed.
Agree. He is the bowler , we are the clay, er bowling ball.
		
		
	 
 
At  least here, he seems to concur that we ourselves are not responsible.  And likening us to bowling balls (his analogy), he seems to also admit  that we are not responsible for what we do. I am sure that now that I  have pointed this out, he will want to retract this or qualify it. Why?  As I said above. This kind of conclusion is unpalatable to most people  and so the Calvinist likes to keep it quiet – for fear of the crowds.  And, given once again, that Lon’s analogy makes God responsible for 
everything that happens in the world, the inference that God is amoral is inescapable.
 
These  conclusions about Calvinism and other forms of dualism are the logical  consequence of God not sharing reality with his creation. In the  Calvinist belief system, God is responsible for everything in the  created world. Any perceived open interaction between real things in our  world is ultimately an illusion because these interactions are not  real. That’s what I meant when I first stated that things have meaning  in themselves and that moments in the course of history arise solely  from themselves and cannot be predicted. Calvinism ultimately denies  this: everything that happens is determined externally by God and value  can only be extrinsic. You are only what God says you are, you do only  what God wills you to do. That is why it is a logical consequence of  Calvinistic dualism (shared largely by Roman Catholicism and eastern  orthodoxy) not only that God himself is amoral but that morality itself  is only an illusion. The truth is that morality can only exist in a world where real  things, real beings, including God himself, are allowed to interact openly; and the fact that God is also real is the proof that God, too, is moral.
I applaud Clete's efforts to bring some rationality into the debate by insisting on the value of logic. Lon is obviously feeling hot under the collar over this, when here: 
	
		
	
	
		
		
			Hi Clete.    I think this an important discussion.     I'd love to see it formally debated by two who are a bit more apt than   you and I, and by that I mean I don't think we communicate as well to  do  it justice that I'd like to see.     A one-on-one or Battle Royale   would be excellent.
		
		
	 
he tries to make the issue go away by forming a committee of 2 that will hopefully never come back to report on the issue, thus allowing him to avoid further embarrassment on the subject. Aside from also implying that Clete is incapable of debating the issue himself. Perhaps he hopes that a knight in shining armour will come to rescue him? It's a great debating ploy: claim that neither you nor your opponent are technically capable of doing the debate justice and so avoid the need to admit you are just wrong. But it is interesting that Lon says exactly the opposite in another post:
	
		
	
	
		
		
			Not that I disagree with logic, just another's  rendition of it.    I am in the upper 5 percentile of Intelligence  quotients so think I've a fair handle on logic.   You can't do well on  logic tests without having that firm of a grasp.
		
		
	 
So what is it to be, Lon? Have you got a 'fair handle on logic', as you say in one post, or are you 'not apt enough to do it justice' as you say in another post? Why not for once answer in a straight manner, with clear words that we can all understand?
And here: 
	
		
	
	
		
		
			In general, I think the exhortation is fine but I   don't have a problem with all of the examples given as you do.      Specifically, however, are you talking about objections you've received   as an Open Theist?   If so, we are not talking about giving a reason  for  the hope within us regarding specifically the gospel, but rather  the  difference between Open Theism and all contenders in-house.
		
		
	 
we see Lon with a similar tactic trying to give himself an excuse once again for his lack of logic, claiming that he is a special person and exempt from the scriptural injunction to have a ready explanation for the hope within him when he is discussing his faith with open theists (who else indeed?). Of course 
for the sake of the crowds he begins by affirming the injunction 'in general'... I rest my case on that issue at least.