‘ The one who believes and is baptized will be saved, but the one who does not believe will be condemned. ‘
In these days, a strong postmodernist influence permeates our culture, and one common entailment of this ideology is a relativistic notion of Truth (the capital was intentional). Fairly enough, a lot of people seem to take issue with the popular idea of a God who allegedly decides your eternal destiny solely on the content of your beliefs. This notion, coupled with the postmodern influence, pushes many to be averse to religious claims about Truth, especially such as bold as those found in the Gospels and instead embrace a form of relative pluralism. As I have already addressed the ‘hard-exclusivist’ ideology (see here), this post will be relatively short, and will tackle two main questions. This post is more intended to ‘get the reader’ thinking, than to be a ‘slam dunk’!
Question 1:
Why did God create the world when he knew that so many people would be lost?
An answer:
One possibility is that God is a mathematician, which is plausible given Job 38:4-6:
‘ “Where were you when I laid the foundation of the earth? Tell me, if you possess understanding! Who set its measurements – if you know – or who stretched a measuring line across it? On what were its bases set, or who laid its cornerstone – ‘
As such, I think it’s likely that he chose to create a world in which he optimised the balance between maximising people who are saved and minimising the number of people who are lost. It’s quite possible that we are living in that world.
Rebuttal:
Alright, but even so, is it a good thing to create people who are going to go to heaven, and to also create people who are going to go to hell? Why not just create…nothing? That way people don’t have to suffer in hell?
Another answer:
I understand your point, but equally, I’m not so sure that it’s fair to preclude the happiness and blessedness of those who would freely embrace God’s invite. The fact that knowledge isn’t causal (i.e., knowing something does not entail that you are causing it to happen), if you are a free agent, it can also be that God has created this world such that you have the best chance to be saved.
Another rebuttal:
But doesn’t the Bible say that ‘few will be saved’ in Luke 13:23-28? Is it fair for God to create so many people for the infinite happiness of just a few at the expense of the eternal misery of the rest?
Another answer:
This is a great question. I think there’s an issue with reducing everything to a utilitarian numbers game, and here’s why.
It seems to me that we effectively have three options.
- God creates humans with no volition – effectively like robots, such that we do his commands not out of desire, but mechanical necessity.
- God creates us as as humans in his image – as rational creatures that are the deciding factors in our actions, with intrinsic tendencies to yearn for the good.
- God creates us as we will be in heaven. Knowing evil for what it really is, and therefore necessarily never choosing it.
Option one may seem like the more reasonable thing, right? No one has to go to hell, no one suffers, it’s all happily-ever-after, right?
I’m not so certain. Emotions, such as love and joy, it seems, become meaningless, virtues such as temperance and prudence are not cultivated – creation, it seems, becomes pointless. I speak more on the power of soul building here (and both 1 and 3 can be responded to in this manner, as they ‘skip’ soul building – for more clear responses to 3, also couple it with reading #objection 3 and #objection 4). None of us would be are freely sharing in God’s love, which is a prime reason for creation – just like a singer singing to a crowd – it loses it’s value if everyone is not just determined, but effectively forced to applaud regardless of the performance.
Another, and more direct issue with option one seems to be what I think is ignoring human volition, and instead implicitly shifting the blame of our actions onto God, which I think sort of begs the question. Jesus, right now, extends his hand to those who wish to follow him, having provided a route for such to happen through his Church, but perfect mercy must be balanced with perfect justice.
Similarly to how one does not blame the chef who put the cake in the oven for it burning when his assistant was tasked with, had ample time to, and missed taking it out on time, one can not blame God for another’s failure to respond to his call (naturally, dependent on how much ‘invincible ignorance’ one has been subjected to).
A final rebuttal:
Hmm, but even if I grant all of that, isn’t it the case that if God creates at all, then he has needs? If God is all-perfect and self-sufficient, then why did he create anything at all? Secondly, I’m still not comfortable with the infinite suffering versus infinite goodness imbalance – creation still seems unjustified.
Another rebuttal:
To the first question, from the Christian perspective, one would affirm that God didn’t create out of necessity, but that creation was a free, loving choice made out of God’s goodness – that it was ‘fitting’. In fact, it’s quite simple to analogize this.
A singer sings to express themselves, not necessarily out of necessity, but out of a desire for others to experience something pleasant. For the singer to sing, it didn’t mean they ‘needed’ to sing, but that they had the desire to express themselves, and with God being a relational being, it seems fitting for a creator to express himself by creating.
To the second question, well, I think creation would still be unjustified if and only if evil was primarily caused by God (i.e., he forced Adam and Eve to make their decision, and forcibly ensures that creatures commit evil actions), but according to Christian theology, that is not true. Apart from commiting the implicit blame shift I highlighted earlier, this also doesn’t take into account the nature of good and evil, which I give a rough sketch of here.
As a privation theorist, I would say that evil is simply parasitic on good, but has no real existence by itself – and per Christian theology of the sacrifice of Jesus, that good triumphs over evil. Similarly, I would say that in heaven, the good that an individual in heaven experiences is greater than the ‘evil’ that someone in hell experiences – but even with this, it would suffice to say that those in Hell are those who have effectively chosen ‘not God’, and therefore have chosen their circumstances. Now, I can’t exactly detail what this ‘evil’ experience entails, although I have tried here but, with the backdrop of Christian theology, I think this is a reasonable response.
Question 2:
Why didn’t God create a world in which everyone freely believes the Gospel and is saved?
An answer:
Per God’s nature, I think free will can be seen as superior to a deterministic model, and therefore, presupposing free will (which I define here), it can be said that it would be logically contradictory (and therefore impossible) to freely make someone do something. Secondly, it could also be that possible worlds which have a 100% belief rate are deficient in other areas – for example, much fewer people. I think that it’s a complex interplay between divine providence and human agency, and properly evaluating the entailment of being an omnipotent, omnibenevolent, omniscient, perfectly-just being isn’t easy.
Rebuttal – a brief interaction on Free Will:
(you’ll never guess how I got this)
A being that is all-knowing, all-powerful and the creator of everything cannot logically grant free will (in a real sense) to anyone, this would imply that although God knows everything he doesn’t know what choices you’ll make even armed with every Infinitesimal detail about your environment, circumstances and the precise state of your mind – if that’s the case he’s not all-knowing. If he does know what you’ll do with your “free will” in advance AND he has the power to alter your environment, circumstances and mind to achieve whatever outcome he wants then he is entirely responsible for the choices you make.
My Answer:
If God knows everything he can do, does that therefore mean he has no free will? It seems that you take issue with the ‘being able to do otherwise’ theory. I would agree with that theory, but would define it as “being able to act based on your own reasoning, without something or someone else forcing you to do it” – i.e., there is no other necessary metaphysical constraint that prevents someone’s will from making a choice.
Knowledge has no causal power, so it doesn’t matter whether God knows what I’m going to do. If I see you drop an apple, it doesn’t follow that me knowing it’s going to hit the floor (ceteris paribus) means that I caused it to hit the floor. I disagree with your implication about God not knowing, and I affirm divine foreknowledge, and I have just shown that foreknowledge is not causal.
“If he does know what you’ll do with your “free will” in advance AND he has the power to alter your environment, circumstances and mind to achieve whatever outcome he wants then he is entirely responsible for the choices you make.” – A classical Christian view does not deny that God has agency and also acts in creation, but this ‘all-powerful’ God that you envision is pretty weird. Your inference is not necessarily true – just conjecture. You might get away with ‘partly responsible’ but ‘entirely’? That’s the point being debated, and if I understand correctly, this part was your justification, so your reasoning is circular here.
You have a faulty/unjustified premise in asserting that if God exists, agency necessarily does not exist, but by that logic it seems that God doesn’t even have free will – which I think is an absurdity – an ‘all-powerful’ creator without agency. Who is inhibiting him?
That’s it! I tried to get ChatGPT to generate some more questions, but many of them were things that I intend to cover in later posts (you’ll notice that I overstepped a little with my free-will section, but I think it provides a good introduction into compatibilist thinking). If you disagree with my answers, or have any contentions, go ahead and drop them below!
Thanks for reading,
Rookie