True dat!Not forever. 1st Thessalonians 4:16-17 (KJV)
True dat!Not forever. 1st Thessalonians 4:16-17 (KJV)
Whether she was deceived or not, she still made the choice (ie. nobody else made it for her).I don't know what true freedom is, but I'll take a crack at false freedom.
False freedom to me would be feeling as if you are truly free, and in actuality, only carrying out someone's clever and tricky plans for me, which involved deceiving me into thinking that I was doing my own will, but was in fact deceived, like Eve.
So true freedom's got to be the opposite of that, I would think.
Well, sorta, but not really.
I would say freedom is no law (no rules) at all, so saying it is 'self law' doesn't seem to fit my definition.
I see real freedom as nothing to tie you down, nothing binding you, no bondage to anything.
(Of course within reason. I mean you are still going to be 'bound' by gravity.)
Well, sorta, but not really.
I would say freedom is no law (no rules) at all, so saying it is 'self law' doesn't seem to fit my definition.
I see real freedom as nothing to tie you down, nothing binding you, no bondage to anything.
(Of course within reason. I mean you are still going to be 'bound' by gravity.)
Freedom has nothing to do with lawlessness, or with not being tied down. All of creation is forever tied to the laws and order established by Creator God.
Law and order, such as the laws of nature (gravity, etc.) point to the moral and spiritual law and orders established by the Creator God, that bind and lead us into all that is righteous and good, and which cannot be denied or nullified by the rebellious unbelief of man.
The only "freedom" a creature in this world ever actually knows, is through the instrument of faith in the Person of Jesus Christ.
There is no freedom to be found in any form or extent of lawlessness. Just the opposite. The first gift God gave to man, was His legal commands that manifested His holiness. . . and later come in flesh, as Jesus Christ.
I don't know what true freedom is, but I'll take a crack at false freedom.
False freedom to me would be feeling as if you are truly free, and in actuality, only carrying out someone's clever and tricky plans for me, which involved deceiving me into thinking that I was doing my own will, but was in fact deceived, like Eve.
So true freedom's got to be the opposite of that, I would think.
Unhindered?So no restraint? Does that imply a law within one's self that is being adhered to unhindered?
Unhindered?
Realistically, I'm not sure if that would be accurate.
I mean, I might choose to run over and try to stab my neighbor with a knife, but he could certainly try to hinder me if he chose to.
So at times you might be hindered, and at other times you might not be hindered.
It's not as though 'freedom' means you have a force field around you that prevents anyone from harming you.
With or without rules, folks are still going to do right and wrong.
You would still have a human nature with or without rules.
I would say that if there is something you cannot make a choice about, then you have restrictions.There's a sense where that is true, but that leads to the idea of true freedom being "doing what I want to do". Isn't that right?
That being the case, does it follow that real freedom looks like "doing all that I want to do without restriction"?
False freedom is being deceived or beguiled while making otherwise free choices. Being deceived or beguiled renders you fundamentally incapable of making a truly free choice, it is the epitome of the lack of freedom, or false freedom as I called it. Your choices are all tainted by all the falsehoods that you honestly believe to be true.That being the case, does it follow that real freedom looks like "doing all that I want to do without restriction"?
I will have to disagree with that statement, or at least with the way it is stated ----- particularly the word "incapable".Being deceived or beguiled renders you fundamentally incapable of making a truly free choice,
I will have to disagree with that statement, or at least with the way it is stated ----- particularly the word "incapable".
Being deceived may cause you to make a poor decision, but your freedom to make decisions is still intact.
Since we have been talking about Eve as one example, I would have to say that Eve still had the exact same freedom of choice (eat or not eat) before and after she was deceived.
When she thought the fruit was bad, she still had the freedom to eat it or not eat it.
When she thought the fruit was good, she still had the freedom to eat it or not eat it.
Nothing changed about her freedom to eat or not eat.
So I don't see how being deceived or making a poor decision rendered Eve "incapable" of having freedom to choose to eat or not eat.
No one questions her decision was a poor one.She was accursed by God with this loss of capacity to volitionally fulfill her moral duties of obedience.
No one questions her decision was a poor one.
She still had the freedom to decide to eat or not to eat.
She had the same freedom to eat or not to eat both before and after she was deceived.
She never lacked the freedom to refuse to eat.
Of course they could, Nang.A&E were cursed for disobeying God's command not to eat. Neither of them were ever originally "free" to partake of what God forbade.
Of course they could, Nang.
Why would GOD even tell them not to eat it if they did not have the capability to do so?
GOD even says "IF" you do eat it,
it's not going to turn out well for you .....
(which implies that they did indeed have the capability to do so, or the warning meant nothing).
Eve always had the capability to not eat the fruit no matter who told her it was bad or who told her it was good.
In fact, GOD tells us that when it comes to temptation, there is always an escape route.
Nang,
Permission or not, Eve could have eaten it or not eaten it.
Getting permission or not getting permission to eat it has nothing to do with your capability to eat it or not.
Define true freedom and give a general outline of what it looks like, practically.