Table of Contents

Omni Properties

The claim is often made that God is perfect in some way; such as that God is maximally loving (perfectly loving) etc. and then the contention is raised that he cannot be both maximally just and maximally merciful, or the contention is raised that if God is all-knowing how can there be free will, etc.

The general answer to these questions is, how do you know God is maximally x?

Maximal Knowledge

Scriptural Answer

So where then does it say God knows everything? You may be surprised to hear that there is no such passage in the bible. In fact, it is explicitly stated that God does not know everything explicitly in a sense which would remove free-will.

This verse explicitly states that man has free will, but that God chooses how things will turn out (see 'External factors' below).

8 * “Remember this and stand firm, recall it to mind, you transgressors,

9 remember the former things of old; for I am God, and there is no other; I am God, and there is none like me,

10 declaring the end from the beginning and from ancient times things not yet done, saying, ‘My counsel shall stand, and I will accomplish all my purpose,’

11 calling a bird of prey from the east, the man of my counsel from a far country. I have spoken, and I will bring it to pass; I have purposed, and I will do it.Isaiah 46:8-12 (ESV)

In this famous passage in which God states he is the only one who can predict the future, he explicitly states that it is only in relation to the promises and prophecies he has made. He declares the end – but not necessarily the mechanism or process by which it will play out. In some cases he does this by direct intervention such as the exodus (or the prophesied return of the lost 10 tribes). Humans may make their own choices but these events are outside the realm of human choice anyways.

So if 'perfect omniscience' is a misapplied quality, what does the scripture say about God's omniscience?

Superior knowledge and understanding

Intercession and Prophecy

Not exhaustive (some are in other categories ex. Isaiah 46:8-12 above), Isaiah 44:7, Daniel 2:28, etc.

Often the verse will show that intercession or prophecy was used to influence choices (because the choice was not altered directly) ex.

Seeing Man's Heart

27 sources. The following is NOT exhaustive; they are just some of the ones I've had time to write down. ex. Hosea 7:2, Amos 5:12, etc. These represent about half the verses I found doing searches on this topic; I found over 200 verses discussing the definition of all-knowing.

These verses explicitly state that God sees into man's heart and knows his choices; but none of them say that God explicitly directs people's thoughts, their chocies, or denies them free will. The verses that do deal with God influencing human choices all indicate that God uses external events to influence choices and does not interfere directly with free will.

A case study of this is how the Pharaoh did not relent until several plagues had come to pass; despite God using plagues to influence him he was still able to choose not to let Israel go out of Egypt. In fact the statement of 'hardening his heart' was explicitly to allow Pharaoh the opportunity to decide not to let them go in the face of powerful supernatural miracles.

Explicit Free Will

26 sources – not exhaustive!

Freewill offerings

The idea here is that not only does one have a choice to fill a law or not, but one may also choose to do more.

Abrogation of Free Will

In one and only one explicit case, God does not interfere with free will. The one and only explicit case is the new covenant in Jeremiah, which only applies to the righteous remnant of Israel by grace, and after a long period of choice:

Apparent contradictions

If someone brings a verse such as Psalm 139:4, the answer is always nearby. Ex.

1 O Lord, you have searched me and known me!

2 You know when I sit down and when I rise up; you discern my thoughts from afar.

3 You search out my path and my lying down and are acquainted with all my ways.

4 Even before a word is on my tongue, behold, O Lord, you know it altogether. Psalms 139:1-4

The intent of this passage is clearly that the Lord has searched his heart and (just before) the word is spoken he knows it; this is stated in v.1, v.2, v.3, and this is the context of v.4.

There may be other examples I will include here later if the response is not directly obvious from the context (as above).

Omniscience does not limit Free Will

If a person is not aware of the scriptural response above, they will often fall into logical problems by misapplying human concepts of perfection on to God. For example:

“If God is omniscient, how can there be free will – because, if God is aware of what we will choose, we will not be able to choose otherwise.”

This is, in general, a failure of the human intellect to understand temporal mechanics. First, we must not limit God by assuming he is limited by time; if the contention is that there is a T1 where a choice has not been made, and a T2 where a choice has been made, then we must assert that God does not change between T1 and T2. The first conclusion is then that regardless of whether God is aware of what we will choose, it is our choice to make: we change, not God.

We do not necessarily need to be aware of the mechanism by which God allows us to have free-will, but it is possible to create an analogy to prove such a thing is possible. We may note that in the running of a computer program which generates a random (or unknown) choice, that there are two classes of time; there is real time (our time) and simulation time. As we run the program from our perspective there is a T1a and a T2a which mark the before and after of our running the program, and there is a T1b and a T2b which, during the running of the simulation, represent before and after the random choice is generated. However, Ta is not bound by Tb – rather, Tb is bound by Ta – such that there is a T3a which has no parallel in Tb and represents our complete knowledge of the simulation bound by Tb.

External factors

It may further be seen that we may alter the results of the simulation to affect certain events without necessarily removing the capacity for individual choice; external factors bound to the simulation may force events to occur regardless of human or personal choice. For example, someone may choose to be a doctor, but might fail medical school. He may then choose to try again or not, but depending on the external factors put into the simulation he may have an easier or harder time; he may have or not have the money or the time to do so, etc. A rabbi once put it this way; it is your choice whether or not to apply for the job, but it is not your choice whether or not you will be hired.

We also see that God can run the simulation any number of times until the results are closer to what he wants.

We then see that there is no logical problem with God being all-knowing and there also being free will.

Maximal Good

not exhaustive – over 100 verses available.

Is the LORD perfectly good? Is he 'maximally' good? Good and not evil? What does this mean? Where in the bible does it say God is 'perfectly good'? This is a human misunderstanding. What is said is, God is holy:

What is holiness? It is a special spiritual quality of God that manifests in various ways such as the ability to exercise Ecumenical Authority. But what about good and evil?

The above are well-known passages but they do not insinuate that God has created evil. This is the 'Cain and Abel' fallacy; Cain says 'Isn't Anokhi my brother's keeper?' and God says 'No, you will be punished for the things you yourself have done.' As we see, god does not approve of evil in that sense:

However, the dichotomy of evil – the idea of free will and free choice including evil – is a specific part of creation:

However – this is not to say God approves of Evil. It is in fact the nature of God to reject evil and choose good. It is in fact Man's choice to do the same;

Conclusion

As it turns out, God created the dichotomy of Good and Evil, however it is his nature to choose the Good and reject the Evil, and thus he is Holy and holds ecumenical authority. He has given us the freewill choice to do the same thing, but as holder of ecumenical authority we have the choice to choose, but not the choice to define the difference between, good and evil.

Maximally Loving

God is not maximally loving. This is a human misunderstanding and misapplication of our human concept of perfection onto God. To wit:

16 There are six things the Lord hates, seven that are detestable to him:

  • 17 haughty eyes,
  • a lying tongue,
  • hands that shed innocent blood,
  • 18 a heart that devises wicked schemes,
  • feet that are quick to rush into evil,
  • 19 a false witness who pours out lies
  • and a person who stirs up conflict in the community.

Proverbs 6:16-19

God also hates cheating and deception, among other thins:

Maximally Just vs. Maximally Merciful

The idea that God is maximally merciful and that this conflicts with maximal justice can be rejected out of hand. The issue is explored in depth in Ezekiel 18 and in many other places (again, this is not an exhaustive list of passages).

This central message is so important that it is repeated several times in this chapter and in others (ex. Ezekiel 33:11).

The conclusion is that God is perfectly Just in his definition of Justice, which includes the ability for us to make full restitution for our sins via honest repentance. This is how we learn;

Maximally Personable

Maximal friendliness, maximally loving, etc.

This argument is often made in support of the Trinity and has absolutely no scriptural basis. In fact we can raise the following verses against it, not exhaustive: