Free to Choose?

Free to Choose?

by David M. Arns
Free to Choose?

Free to Choose?

by David M. Arns

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Overview

One of the most hotly debated concepts in the last 500 years or so has been that of whether or not people actually have a free will to choose their eternal destiny. People debate each other with--shall we say, religious fervor--and people on both sides of the debate offer Scriptures to support their viewpoints. On the one hand, we have people who believe that God offers us a choice to voluntarily repent and turn to Him. On the other hand, we have people who believe that God is sovereign, and that sovereignty necessarily means that God determines the eternal destination of everyone, with no regard to our choices. They can't both be correct, because they say mutually exclusive things. And actually, the Bible is remarkably unambiguous in its teachings; reading Scriptures in context and thinking about how Scriptures relate to each other make it abundantly clear which of these is actually the Biblical position.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940151294430
Publisher: Arns Publishing
Publication date: 04/15/2015
Series: Thoughts On , #6
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 7 MB

About the Author

Dave Arns was raised in church, but didn't start actually serving the Lord until his sophomore year of high school, in 1972. Being of a rather analytical turn of mind, he was delighted to see that there is a Biblical mandate for all Christians to be analytical: I Thessalonians 5:21 (NIV) says "Test everything. Hold on to the good." That, coupled with Paul's exhortation to teach what "the Holy Ghost teaches," not depending on man's wisdom (I Corinthians 2:11–14), and the commendation of the Bereans, who "searched the scriptures daily, whether those things were so" (Acts 17:11), pretty much define Dave's life, in the spiritual realm, as well as the natural realm. In the mid-1970s, Dave heard a sermon in which he was exhorted to "know what you believe and why you believe it," and he has been trying to put that into practice ever since. He has been known to abandon long-held beliefs when someone showed him that they were incompatible with Scripture; that attitude seems to be necessary if we want to continue to grow in the Lord.
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