Jesus was/is both fully human and fully God. Did He only have free will as God and not as a man?
Did Jesus have free will?
Discussion in '2005 Archive' started by webdog, Apr 25, 2005.
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webdog;
Yes Christ had freewill and He exercised it by doing the will of the Father. He could have taken Satans offer when He was tempted but, why would He? When Satan didn't have anything to offer that wasn't already the property of God?
It was His freewill to be incarnated and be sacrificed for the sins of the world.
May Christ Shine His Light on us All;
Mike -
I agree. Since we are fully human, this should apply to us then. God foreknew the decisions Jesus would make, but He still had free will. Why does calvinism say then man has no free will to accept Jesus as Lord?
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I do not think that it is Biblically correct to say that Jesus had a "free" human will. Yes, as he was fully God and fully Man, He did indeed possess "Two Wills", the divine and the human. As indeed He had two "Personalities" (NOT two Persons), in the perfect sense, and not in contradiction. If, as some hold, that Jesus had only His divine Personality, then we have the problem with the reality of His human nature. As the human nature cannot be complete without the personality, which indeed is the "seat" of the nature. However, we must stress that this is a mystery, as Jesus is NOT two Persons. He is two natures, Divine and human, yet only one Person.
The human "will" of Jesus could not have been "free" in the sense as we know it, as Jesus Himself said, "I ALWAYS do the things that please the Father" (John 8:29). You see, "free will" gives the person the power to "decide between alternatives". But, in the Incarnate Christ, for example, it was "not possible for Him to have sinned", and NOT "possible for Him not to have sinned". For us, it is the opposite, when we resist temptation, it is because we were "able not to sin"; but with Christ, He was "not able to sin". There was not even a flicker of doubt in Jesus in doing what He came to do. Even when He prayed in the garden, He knew within Himself that His will was one with the Father. He could not have done otherwise. He did not have any choice in the Cross. -
First, Jesus repeatedly said that He came to do the will of the Father. Is there a passage that said He independently, of absolute separate free will "chose" to do the will of the Father? I can't recall one.
Second, your example parallel doesn't hold. Jesus had a divine nature... His nature did not need to be changed for Him to "make the right 'free will' decisions".
I believe fully that man has a free will that because of his spiritual sin nature will always be exercised to reject the gospel.
When the Holy Spirit changes His nature, the only "natural" thing for him to do is to embrace the gospel. -
John 5:30 I can of Myself do nothing. As I hear, I judge; and My judgment is righteous, because I do not seek My own will but the will of the Father who sent Me.
Luke 22:41 And He was withdrawn from them about a stone's throw, and He knelt down and prayed, 42 saying, "Father, if it is Your will, take this cup away from Me; nevertheless not My will, but Yours, be done."
John 6:38 For I have come down from heaven, not to do My own will, but the will of Him who sent Me. -
The fly in their ointment so to speak. -
Second, your example parallel doesn't hold. Jesus had a divine nature... His nature did not need to be changed for Him to "make the right 'free will' decisions".
I believe fully that man has a free will that because of his spiritual sin nature will always be exercised to reject the gospel.
</font>[/QUOTE]IF your view of limited free will is ONLY the depravity of man - then ONCE we are born again that ends.
Secondly - you would never make the argument against free will that is of the form "God knew you would choose option-A today so you have no choice".
All such arguments - argue against God having free will.
(Staying with the point of the quoted remark above) -
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just-want-peace Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
I say that He had the capability to sin, BUT He also had the perfect relation with the Father (like Adam prior to the stumble, if you will) to give Him the power to resist en toto the temptations. -
The problem is that our wills, when in our natural state, is not free, but bound in sin. We are still able to choose, but because our will is bound in sin we will always choose against God rather than for Him because the natural man is at enmity with God. -
It's Interesting what Jesus said about himself in John 5:19
Joh 5:19 Then answered Jesus and said unto them, Verily, verily, I say unto you, The Son can do nothing of himself, but what he seeth the Father do: for what things soever he doeth, these also doeth the Son likewise.
If a human has a free will can he not do whatever he wills?
Jesus said he could do nothing of himself but only what he saw the Faither doing.
I would hesitate to say that Jesus had a free will as defined by this board from the evidence we find in the Gospels. -
Jesus ALSO said....
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I totally agree Diane.
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I see that an important factor has been overlooked in this discussion. Since Jesus ah His Incarnation took on the nature of a human, which was not fallen, and therefore without sin, He yet retained His divine nature, sine He is God. The Person, Jesus Christ is "unique", since He alone is the God-Man. It is wrong in my opinion, to compare Jesus with Adam before the fall, as Adman was only human.
The temptations that Jesus experienced were as real as those we do, since He was tempted like us. But, to be tempted does not mean that He would have had to have had the abilty to have given into the temptations. "Temptation" has the predominant sense of putting to the proof with the intention and the hope that the 'proved' may not turn out 'approved', but 'reprobate'; may break down under the proof; and thus the word is constantly applied to the solicitations and suggestions of Satan (Matt.iv.1; 1 Cor.vii.5; Rev.ii.10" (Professor R Trench, Synonyms of the New Testament, p.281)
If it is believed that Jesus was "able to have sinned", and that He "chose not to have sinned". Then would this also mean that His thoughts were at times "evil" by the suggestions from the devil, and He dismissed them? I am of the opinion that as Almighty God, is was not at all possible for Christ to have sinned, as His Holy Divine nature was so closely related to His human nature, that made this impossible. I do not see any difficulty with those who suggest that the temptations that Jesus faced were therefore not "real" Herein is a great mystery. -
When Jesus is in the Garden of Gethsemane He prays for the cup to pass from Him - and then adds "not MY will but THY will be done".
In your explanation above He could have said "I CAN not actually seriously consider anything but complete success here because I don't have the ABILITY to fail". The scene is "presented" in scripture as if He is making a hard decision rather than "incapable" or "unnable" to make any "other" choice. -
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It is not presented in the "I have no ability to do anything but succeed" style.
Wouldn't you agree?
In Christ,
Bob
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