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FREE WILL
The Biblical View
by
Rev. Roger Smalling, D.Min
Part One
Free will has been the storm center of controversy for centuries. Volumes
have been written on it and heated debates continue in theological
circles.
Much of the heat dissipates when the terms are clearly defined: What
is a will? What is meant by 'free'? Is there a connection between free
will and responsibility? Free from what ? Free to do what? Does the will
govern us or are we governed by some other faculty? We find little controversy
over the definition of 'will.' All agree it is the faculty by which we
make choices. The disagreements concern the meaning of 'free.'
Theologians distinguish between 'natural' liberty and 'moral'
liberty. 'Natural liberty' refers to ordinary decisions involving our
material welfare and human relationships. What we eat for breakfast,
whom we marry, whether to continue reading this page or what to watch
tonight on television all fall into the category of 'natural' liberty.
The term 'natural' liberty includes certain religious activities.
Unsaved people can memorize Scripture, learn hymns or join a church.
Sinners have a conscience and daily make positive moral choices. They
can choose between telling the truth or a lie. No branch of theology
denies the 'natural' freedom of the will. 'Moral' freedom is where controversy
erupts. The following questions highlight the issue:
Apart from sovereign grace, is fallen man able to submit to God, trust
in Christ and desire holiness as his supreme value? Can his free will
generate faith and repentance?
A Clue: What Is A Human Being?
In Genesis 1:27 we read, "So God created man in His own image;" The
Bible defines a human being as a creature made in God's image. In reverse,
we can say 'image of God' means a human being. Suppose two angels were
talking and one asked what God is like. The other might reply, "Over
there is an example. It's called a human being.'
The term 'image of God' defines our essence as beings. As the 'image
of God' we are responsible to reflect what He is. Since this is the reason
for human existence, our responsibility can never change...no matter
what else happens. God does not have a body. He is infinite. So the image
of God must refer to His internal nature.
Is God absolutely holy? Does God have a free will? Of course! He is
the most free being in the universe. Can God lie? No. (See Titus 1:2)
Why not? Because nothing in His holy character finds a lie attractive.
He cannot want to. Definition? Moral free will means absolute purity
and freedom from sin because of a holy nature.
From this, we see what cosmic treason it is to be anything but holy.
Unholiness is a denial of our core essence and the supreme insult to
our Creator. The notion of moral free will as a faculty suspended between
good and evil is fiction. Moral neutrality does not exist. We have a
hint of this in Romans 6.
Rom. 6:17-18 But God be thanked that though you
were slaves of sin, yet you obeyed from the heart that form of doctrine
to which you were delivered. 18 And having been set free from sin,
you became slaves of righteousness.
The Point
The will reflects the true nature of the person. In this sense, it is
not the ruling faculty in man. It is not free in the sense of autonomy.
This explains why God tells the truth, the devil does evil and sinners
love sin. They like it that way because of their respective natures.
Each chooses freely according to their desires, without compulsion, depending
on their true natures.
Second, the will of man is not morally neutral. If it were, we would
assume his character is morally neutral as well. Nothing in Scripture,
reason or human experience supports such an assumption. What Is A Will?
Would you like to see your free will? Go stand in front of a full-length
mirror. The reflection is your free will. It is you. It is the totality
of everything you are. Now look at the mirror itself, not just your reflection.
Your will is like the mirror. It reflects what you are. If it functioned
independently of a person's nature, then how could it be said that the
choices truly reflect the person himself? This may explain why the Bible
speaks volumes about the heart and so little about the will.
What Are The Implications For Fallen Man?
Loss of freedom
As a person moves away from God, he moves away from freedom. His bondage
increases. By the very definition of 'bondage' he becomes unable to return
to God. His will still exists and functions though it is aimed toward
more slavery.
Man's Responsibility Remains The Same. Can God rightly hold him responsible
for turning back to God although he cannot? Should God command him to
do right even though he can no longer will to do it? Man is still the
image of God even though the image is marred. Man's responsibility is
based on the purpose for which he was created, not on his current moral
ability. Additionally, fallen man retains some knowledge of God through
the creation and the conscience. Everyone has some degree of light although
they choose to suppress it.
Man's moral responsibility to obey God has nothing to do with his free
will
The Bible never suggests our responsibility is based on free will. No
philosopher or theologian has ever been able to show a necessary connection
between responsibility and free will. One might as well say a debtor
is not responsible for his debt if he cannot pay.
The Will Is Bound To The Carnal Nature And Controlled By It. Bible teaching
on the moral state of the carnal mind shows indicates this. It is dominated
by the carnal reason, cannot submit to God's law, follows the thought-forms
of this world, is God's enemy, is under the dominion of Satan and defiled.
Religious humanists who declare the moral freedom of the will must do
one of two things: Either show from Scripture that the will is not a
function of the mind, or show how the will was the only human faculty
to escape the fall.
Sinners are unable to generate faith or repentance without
divine intervention.
This is a consequence of bondage to the carnal nature. In another chapter
we will study how God changes the direction of a sinner's will without
forcing it. In What Ways, Then, Is The Will Free Or Not Free?
The will of man is free to act according to his own desires without compulsion
from anything outside. As we will see in another chapter, God does not
force our will in conversion, but works indirectly through influences
in our nature. It is never free, however, from the overruling providence
of God. "In him we live and move and have our being." Acts 17:24 Not
even the fallen will could exist without God's sustaining power.
What about the sovereignty of God in all this?
Remember we said in chapter one how God works indirectly? He has a big
tool box. One of these tools is the free will of man. God uses man's
choices, even the fall into sin, to accomplish His plan for history.
This involves His ultimate glory and the demonstration of His attributes,
such as grace, judgment and love. Conclusions The will is never autonomous
either from God or from the person himself. By falling into sin, man
lost the ability to will or do anything to convert himself or submit
to God's authority. He did not lose, however, his responsibility God.
From This Section We Learned: The will is the mental faculty that chooses
according to the nature of the being it represents.
Moral freedom of the will and holiness are inseparably linked,
as in God.
The will is not the governing factor in man. His nature is.
Man is essentially the image of God, fallen or not. As such, his responsibility
to obey God cannot change however much his will may be in bondage.
God is perfectly just in commanding fallen man to do what he cannot
do.
Scripture and reason require us to reject any definition of free will
involving autonomy.
FREE WILL
The Religious Humanist View
Part Two
Humanism takes two forms, secular and religious. Both assume the will
of man is autonomous. According to humanism, man's will is the ruling
faculty in his nature, independent from any influences outside of itself.
If the respective parts of human nature were a train, humanists would
identify the will as the engine. They see the will as the driving force
of human nature. In their thinking, the will of man drags the other
faculties behind it by its autonomous power.
Secular and religious humanism arrive at the assumption
of autonomy from different approaches. The secular humanist holds to
autonomy simply because he believes there is no God. He sees the glory
of man as the only worthwhile pursuit because nothing else is supreme.
These assumptions pervade modern culture. In films, the
hero lifts himself to victory by the force of his will. He may have a
few character flaws but he has even these under control. The power of
the mind to control reality permeates science fiction. The message is
clear: Man's potential is limitless. All he needs is to reach into the
depths of his own being and draw upon the goodness and power hidden there,
and the victory will be his.
For the purposes of this study, secular humanism concerns
us little because it is atheistic. We are more concerned with religious
humanism because of its insidious influences on Evangelicals today. More
theological errors stem from wrong views about free will than any other
teaching.
Even errors about God often result from false concepts
about man. People would rather change God than themselves. The religious
humanist looks on the will as a special ground on which God will not
tread. He feels it is a contradiction to call the will 'free' unless
it is exempt from divine control. This would be a kind of cosmic cheating.
A common teaching is, "God does not violate our free will." Secular
humanism views man's will as morally neutral. Babies are born with a
blank slate for a mind. Their environment and parental influences explain
human behavior, not innate tendencies. Because of the doctrine of the
fall of Adam, religious humanists have difficulty holding to a view of
man's will as morally neutral. They come close to it though, by saying
man is born with a 'bias' toward sin but is not dominated by it. This
allows them to accommodate biblical teaching about sin without abandoning
the basic assumption of autonomy.
The Bible explodes this notion with many texts like Romans
3:12,
"There is none who does good, no, not one." This is why legalism among
Christians is so despicable. Like a flower it may impress us. Then we
notice its roots feeding off the muck of humanist presuppositions.
The source of the assumptions
The assumption of autonomy is the default setting of human
nature. (In computer language, 'default setting' means the operating
instructions set to work automatically when the computer is on.) The
fall of Adam programmed human nature to assume its own autonomy because
autonomy was the whole idea behind the fall in the first place. The fall
produced not only sin but a set of delusions regarding man's own righteousness
and his power to produce it. This is why all religions, except biblical
Christianity, are works-righteousness systems. The Influence Of Religious
Humanism In Evangelical Circles With the influence of modern culture
and the default settings of human nature, it is no wonder religious humanism
permeates large sectors of Christianity. As a result, an entire theology
has grown up to defend it. Some arguments sound plausible until we examine
them closer. It is important for Christian workers today to be aware
of these arguments and know how to refute them so believers can be sound
in the faith.
Religious Humanist Arguments
Error One: Assuming commands and exhortations
from the Bible prove we must have the ability to do them.
This error assumes responsibility proves ability. One hears, "God would
never command a person to do what he could not do." Or, "God would never
tell a person to repent and believe if he could not do it." We might
as well say a debtor is not responsible for his debt unless he can pay.
As we pointed out in the previous chapter, man's responsibility
is based on his status as God's image, not on his current abilities.
God will never lower His standards of holiness just because His image
fell into sin.
Man's inability always comes from his own corruption, not
from any unreasonable demand of his Creator. Why did God give the Law
to Moses? Did He actually expect the Jews to keep it? Did He suppose
they could?
In Romans Chapter Three we see two reasons why God gave
commandments to fallen man:
A. To vindicate the righteousness of God
B. To expose the sinfulness of man.
- Neither of these have anything to do with proving man's moral free
will:
-
Rom. 3:4-6 &20 "...let God be true but every man
a liar. As it is written: "That You may be justified in Your words,
And may overcome when You are judged."5 But if our unrighteousness
demonstrates the righteousness of God, what shall we say? Is God
unjust who inflicts wrath? (I speak as a man.) 6 Certainly not! For
then how will God judge the world?" 20 Therefore by the deeds of
the law no flesh will be justified in His sight, for by the law is
the knowledge of sin.
Even more striking is Paul's statement in Romans 8:7 that the carnal mind
is unable to submit to God's law. If the will is part of the mind, then
we are forced to conclude that fallen man, without grace, is unable to
choose submission to God.
-
Because the carnal mind is enmity against God;
for it is not subject to the law of God, nor indeed can be.
-
To summarize, Paul is saying the entire Old Testament was given to
prove man's inability to obey God. It hardly makes sense, therefore,
to quote from the Old Testament to prove free will.
Error two: Assuming commands to repent or believe are meaningless
unless man could comply
-
-
These commands are as much a part of the Law as any other. Fallen
man is equally unable to obey these without grace.
- Error three: Assuming predetermination of will contradicts
the whole idea of freedom
This objection assumes the will is morally neutral, neither good nor
evil. If so, we would have to say the will of God, as well as the
will of Christ, angels and believers in heaven are not free since
they are predetermined to good only. Likewise, we would have to say
demons are not responsible for their actions because their wills
are entirely determined to evil.
Error Four: Confusing natural
liberty with moral liberty
Choosing our breakfast or which car to buy falls within the realm of
natural liberty. Conversion to Christ, though, is a uniquely spiritual
experience without precedent in the natural world which we can hardly
equate with a breakfast menu. Nor does choosing a car involve surrendering
the ego to a Supreme Authority. Comparing the miracle of conversion
to natural liberty is inappropriate.
Error Five: Assuming God does not 'violate' the free
will of man
That is correct. He does not. If God were to grab a person's will and
twist it by direct physical force, this would be a 'violation.' It is
not a 'violation' of the will to change the person's inner nature to
generate new perceptions and desires. Error Six: Assuming free will is
essential to the image of God.
Some teachers claim man's status as God's image must include moral free
will. If God is 'free' then man must be 'free' also. This confuses 'free'
with 'autonomous' or 'uncaused.' God is the only autonomous and uncaused
Being in the universe. He is uncreated. It is a contradiction to say
man is a creation of God and then claim man's will is uncaused or autonomous.
The Bible shows man is still the image of God even though fallen. Yet
elsewhere the Bible shows man's entire nature is bound by sin. Apparently
Bible writers saw no necessary connection between free will and 'image
of God.'
Summary
Fallen man's basic assumption about himself is own autonomy. This results
in two forms of humanism, secular and religious. While the secular form
presents a challenge in the public domain, the religious form is even
more insidious. The devastating effects of the autonomous view leads
to legalism, liberalism and other theological errors. Christians need
to be aware of the arguments for religious humanism and how to refute
them.
From this study we learned:
- Fallen man invariably assumes his is autonomous. This means he thinks
his will is free from God and free from any cause beyond himself, as
though he were a god himself.
- All forms of humanism, whether secular or religious, stem from the
delusion of autonomy.
- Commands and exhortations from the Bible do not prove moral free
will.
- Predetermination of will does not contradict the idea of freedom.
- Natural freedom of will does not prove moral freedom.
- God's influence on man's nature to change the direction of his will
is not a violation of free will.
Some
who read this article also liked our book, Unlocking
Grace.
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