MD
qualiaphile
How do Abrahamic faiths, who believe in an omnipotent and omniscient God, reconcile free will and predestination?
If God is omnipotent, then God created everything. If God is omniscient, then God knows everything that will happen. Thus the universe is deterministic and without free will.
God knows everything that will happen, and has created everything in sequence as to what will happen. Our wills are guided by our brains, and our brains exist in a deterministic universe, in the sequence God created.
Such a God also cannot use judgement to gauge our actions, since he created the conditions and knew of the outcomes before we did. So there is no need to judge, our actions are simply known. And Mercy would be irrelevant and an illusion in such a universe as well.
How do the Abrahamic faiths answer this paradox?
If God is omnipotent, then God created everything. If God is omniscient, then God knows everything that will happen. Thus the universe is deterministic and without free will.
God knows everything that will happen, and has created everything in sequence as to what will happen. Our wills are guided by our brains, and our brains exist in a deterministic universe, in the sequence God created.
Such a God also cannot use judgement to gauge our actions, since he created the conditions and knew of the outcomes before we did. So there is no need to judge, our actions are simply known. And Mercy would be irrelevant and an illusion in such a universe as well.
How do the Abrahamic faiths answer this paradox?