No, that is illogical.
It's perfectly logical.
Say you - or God - have a choice: you can either do a thing or not do the thing. If you do the thing, the world will end up one way... let's call it X. If you don't do the thing, the world will end up a different way... let's call it Y.
The difference between X and Y - is what you - or God - caused.
A car manufacturer builds a car that can go very fast, way over the speed limit.
A man buys that car and drives it way over the speed limit and that man crashes and kills a carload of people.
It is not the car manufacturer who is to blame, it is the man who bought the car and drove recklessly.
Both caused the crash.
If the car manufacturer hadn't made the car, there would have been no crash.
If there was a trial, the car manufacturer would not even be brought into a courtroom. Only the man who drove the car way over the speed limit and crashed would be responsible.
Car manufacturers are shielded from lawsuits by laws made specifically to protect them because if carmakers were held liable for the reasonably foreseeable consequences of their products, it would be impossible for any carmaker to stay in business.
Even so, lawsuits do happen sometimes.
God would not be culpable or responsible because God's foreknowledge does not CAUSE anything to happen..
You sound confused.
The foreknowledge doesn't make anything happen; it would just inform God's actions.
God doing a thing would make him responsible for the effects that flow from the thing.
God having foreknowledge of those effects would make him culpable for them if he chose to do the thing.
God did not cause the car in the above example to crash.
If we're going from the assumption that God created the world and humanity according to his design, then there are only two possibilities:
- the design is functioning as intended. God deliberately created a world where car crashes would happen. In this case, God is definitely both responsible and culpable for the crash.
- the design is not functioning as intended. God designed a world where car crashes wouldn't happen, but the design has failed in some way so that they happen anyway. God has created a flawed design and is therefore a flawed designer. God is responsible for the outcome, but whether he's culpable depends on a number of factors.
Correct, but only for what He caused.
But if your theology is right, God caused absolutely everything.
Case in point:
Parents are responsible for their children because they caused them to come into existence by procreating, but after their children grow up and are on their own the parents are no longer responsible for their children.
... because human parents' foreknowledge is limited.
If someone knew that if they had a kid, the kid would grow up to be a serial killer, but decided to have the kid anyway, the parent would be morally culpable for their child's murders.
It's that fact that we don't have the ability to see the future that excuses human parents.
Again: you sound confused.God would only be culpable for what He caused.
God is not culpable for what He knows will happen.
Let's say that I know that my husband is going to die of cancer since he was diagnosed and that was the prognosis.
Am I culpable for his death just because I know he is going to die?
An example that might help get the idea across:
Imagine you're in your car, stopped at a red light. The light turns green, so you decide to go.
Unbeknownst to you, a speeding school bus on the cross street is going to run the red light. It hits your car, rolls, and everyone on board dies. Did you do anything wrong? No.
But let's switch the scenario up: imagine that, while you were stopped at the light, you knew that if you went on the green, that bus crash would happen and all those kids would die. Would you step on the accelerator right away, or would you wait until after the bus is clear? What's the reason for your choice?