
FREEDOM
OF THE WILL By William Heinrich
Jonathan Edwards in his
brilliant essay "The Freedom of the Will" states that
"all men have the freedom to do whatever they please given their choices.
Men will choose, but their choices are determined by their desires."
Augustine
put the subject this way, "We have the freedom to choose one thing or
another, but the ability to choose only what we want." R.C. Sproul reminds
us,
"Man is free but only God is sovereign and autonomous (a law unto
themselves). If man is autonomous then God cannot be sovereign. Since God
is sovereign then man's freedom, though real, is limited." He continues,
" If
God's sovereignty is limited by human freedom, then it is man and not
God who is sovereign."
Historically the subject has always been debated. Luther debated with
Erasmus, Calvin with Arminius and Edwards with the Armenians of his day.
Pelagius argued the fall of Adam only effected Adam and did not pass on a
sin nature to all born from him. Therefore, man is totally free to choose good
or evil. Augustine argued the fall produced the loss of true liberty in which
man
no longer desires the things of God and will never choose God without divine
help. Pelagianism was condemned by the church but was revised later by
Charles Finney. Today most evangelical churches have promoted a
semi-pelagian concept that the fall did to some extent bring corruption
to our nature but the will is still able to accept or refuse this offer ofgrace.
Augustine, Calvin, Edwards, Luther and the church of the 17th and 18th
century believed that for the sinner (all mankind) to respond by faith in the
gospel. God must first do a work of grace that effects man's
soul causing him to desire it.
The question is can everyone without divine intervention choose Christ of their
own volition? The answer is they can choose Him, but they won't want to
because of sin's corruption and influence on their nature thus they simply are
not able. So God chose us before we chose Him. God granted us faith before
we exercised faith. We have a free will but God must effect us
sovereignly and graciously to make us willing.