Re: Does God have free will?
Welcome back, whoever you are. You might be interested to know that a new forum has been created specifically for religion and spirituality related topics. You'll probably want to PM a mod and ask them to move it.
As for your question; What, exacly, does "God is love" mean? I'm guessing you're not trying to say "God is: 1 an intense feeling of deep affection. 2 a deep romantic or sexual attachment to someone. 3 a great interest and pleasure in something. a person or thing that one loves. 5 (in tennis, squash, etc.) a score of zero."
Re: Does God have free will?
Quote:
Originally posted by pyrhho
Long time no see y'all! sorry i don't post as often as i should anymore.
Anyway, here's one that's been baking my noodle. Does God have free will? The bible specifically says, \"God is Love.\" and it also specifically outlines what Love would do in any given situation (well, it gives outlines). so could God ever NOT do what love should? Could God have chosen to NOT make us? If god hadn't made us, would he still be God?
Well, that's it. Fight!
Treating God as though He is locked into some system of mathematical absolutes is to diverge away from the God of Revelation and History to the God as defined by speculative Greek Philosophy. Yes, that antichrist Paul may have said that God is Love, and yes, some Greek Emperor had published Paul in the bible (because paul specifically declared that the State was supreme over Religion, and so paul was published not because he was Religious but only because he was political), but that hardly can be said to define paul as the Word of God, no matter what the protestants maintain.
God is a great deal more than Love. We also have Justice and Wisdom to think about. Often times Justice and Wisdom would preclude Love, no?
Jesus came close to Godliness... more than most. And did not Jesus, in Justice, after His betrayal, did He not put a curse upon Jerusalem. It was not Love that assured that "not one stone of Jerusalem will be left standing upon another". We must keep in mind that the Religions of Revelation speak as often of God's Wrath as of his Love.
Indeed, the modern Marian Revelations (those messages from the Apparitions of the Blessed Virgin Mary, our modern Goddess) insist upon the need of penance and atonement in order to divert and mitigate the "wrath" of God. God may have a great deal of Love for those who repent, but this Love falls far short of being so unconditional that it yet tolerates willful Evil. God is the Good Shepherd that makes a choice to protect His sheep by treating the wolves as enemies.
Love must always indicate a preference. He who loves everything, loves nothing. Love indicates a choice, a focus. Anyone who has ever been betrayed in 'love' knows this -- that a love that can spread itself out far and wide is not very deep.
So for the love of God to matter and be relevent, it must be limited and selective. And Revelation and History (mythology , if you prefer that word) support this notion. It was not an all embracing Love that motivated God to destroy the most part of the Human Race with the Great Flood. His Love for a few remaining good people was His incentive for destroying the far greater majority who would have endangered the virtue of His favorites.