i was just thinking bout random stuff in the car and it came to me..... Did pharoh really have free will? becuase the Bible says he hardened pharohs heart..... ?
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[b said:Quote[/b] ]The LORD said to Moses, "When you return to Egypt, see that you perform before Pharaoh all the wonders I have given you the power to do. But I will harden his heart so that he will not let the people go." Exodus 4:21
[b said:Quote[/b] ]God didn't have to hardened his heart, it was already hardened.
[b said:Quote[/b] ]To harden someone's heart is, apparently, to interfere in the person's motivational system so as to cause the person to act in a way different than he or she would have otherwise acted. Consequently, the most obvious problem posed by hardening of the hearts pertains to the loss of free will incurred by the hardened agent.
Most philosophers subscribe to the principle that, when an agent S interferes directly to affect agent V's motivational system in a way that does not involve rational persuasion--brainwashing, hypnosis and the like--such interference will normally preclude V's freely performing and bearing responsibility for acts that the intervention caused. It would seem, therefore, that, by hardening, God deprives certain people of a significant good, free will.
[b said:Quote[/b] ](D)isposing of the free will deprivation problem by altering our value judgments about free will still leaves us with‑-besides the question about God's motivation-‑three other difficulties:
1) The responsibility problem: If God causes Pharaoh to will an evil act, namely, keeping the Israelites enslaved, why should Pharaoh be held responsible for this act and be punished for it? How can free will and moral responsibility coexist with hardening?
2) The repentance‑prevention problem: Judaism teaches that God wants sinners to repent. If so, why would God prevent any individual from changing his ways for the better?
3) The causation problem: If God causes Pharaoh to will an evil act, namely, keeping the Israelites enslaved, has God not (a) caused an evil act, (b) made a person morally worse, and © caused further suffering to the Israelites and Egyptians?
All of these problems are formidable, even if we are not troubled by God's taking away free will.
[b said:Quote[/b] ]So why did He do it?
[b said:Quote[/b] ]Consequently, it doesn't matter WHY, the fact is He DID, which means He interfered with Pharoah's Free Will.
[b said:Quote[/b] ]It's not like it's the only time He did it either, it's just one of the most blatant. Every time He appeared to someone, everytime He spoke to someone, wouldn't that be altering someone's Free Will?
[b said:Quote[/b] ]So why wasn't it a bad thing to interfere with Free Will back in the day?
[b said:Quote[/b] ]Take the Garden of Eden. Put two naive beings in the middle of it, then add the serpent, who is described as the craftiest of all the beasts in the field. Who let him into the Garden of Eden? Who allowed him to communicate with Eve? Talk about a set up. Again, HUGE interference with Man's Free Will, which ultimately sets up the First Sin. You don't think God didn't want or expect that to happen? God set Man up to fall. That was His intention after all. Sure, Man had Free Will to choose right or wrong, but when you put a naive person up against the craftiest of all animals, what do you THINK is going to happen?
[b said:Quote[/b] ]That was His intention after all.
[b said:Quote[/b] ]Are you suggesting that you could comprehend Gods will? Are you saying that you should be some how on an equal understanding with God?
[b said:Quote[/b] ]You did an end run around my arguement, it does change the validity of my arguement though. He was predisposed to be against the Jews to begin with, knowing full well that Pharoh would not soften his heart, God purposely put him in power. Why, to show the Hebrews and the Egyptians that he was God.
[b said:Quote[/b] ]But isn't this what you keep saying that you want, God to reveal himself to you on your terms, so you could ask him your question?
[b said:Quote[/b] ]You have not factually, emotionally or spiritually shown that indeed that is what he has done.
[b said:Quote[/b] ]Are you actually arguing that without choice we still have freewill? So what, God allowed Adam and Eve the opportunity to sin, God did not choose it for them. If you remove the ability to choose, you also remove the most important determining factor that defines freewill.
[b said:Quote[/b] ]God gave Adam and Eve a choice: Do it my way or do it your way. In no way did he manipulate freewill.
[b said:Quote[/b] ]Look whos the expert of Gods intention... You are blatantly twisting scripture to what you think it should be. Who are you trying to deceive in doing this?
[b said:Quote[/b] ]Remember, to God, the past, the present and the future has already happened in his eye.
[b said:Quote[/b] ]The staff to snake miracle - "Each one threw down his staff and it became a snake. But Aaron's staff swallowed up their staffs. Yet Pharaoh's heart became hard and he would not listen to them, just as the Lord had said"_Exodus 7:12-13
Plague of Locusts - "And the Lord changed the wind to a very strong west wind, which caught up the locusts and carried them into the Read Sea. Not a locust was left anywhere in Egypt. But the Lord hardened Pharaoh's heart, and he would not let the Israelites go.
[b said:Quote[/b] ]"When the king of Egypt was told that the people had fled, Pharaoh and his officials changed their minds about them and said, "What have we done? We have let the Israelites go and have lost their services!" SO he had his chariot made ready and took his army with him.He took six hundred of the best chariots, along with all the other chariots of Egypt, with officers over all of them. The Lord hardened the heart of Pharaoh king of Egypt, so that he pursued the Israelites, who were marching out boldly._Exodus 14:5-8