huckelberry wrote: In my view and general traditional understanding is that God was not created in any way and specifically not created from preexisting parts. However as you point out LDS thinking proposes both God and us share that uncreated quality.
That is essentially correct. This is something that many critics of the LDS church do not understand. For example, some anti-Mormons criticize the LDS because they claim that we believe Jesus is a created being. The problem with that is that they think of "created" as meaning "ex nihilo". From the LDS point of view, Jesus (or the perfect divine intelligence of Jesus) has always existed.
Note: This also caused issues by the time the Council of Nicea was formed to hash out the Trinity. Ex Nihilo creation theology had already become the standard view by that time (started near the end of the second century A.D). So, when people argued that Christ was a second being, (ie second to the Father, people felt that it must imply that Christ was created ex nihilo, which was unacceptable. But it is unacceptable because Ex Nihilo is a wrong assumption to begin with.
huckelberry wrote: My proposal was that in the context of exnilo creation whatever freewill we have comes from the creative potential of God. I do not think that Gods creation is limited to mechanical and determined processes he may be able to create something more in his own image. I was not embarking on a criticism of LDS view but declining your criticism of my faith.
I don't think that you have addressed the problems I proposed to the idea of free will in the video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TxOiYvKDackYou say you disagree with my conclusion and you "decline it", but you have not addressed why. Certainly, by watching the video and seeing the arguments, you can see why I find the traditional Christian viewpoint to be problematic.
huckelberry wrote:There is nobody who actually knows that exnilo guarantees such is actually the case. The fact that the results of creation, us, do not match suggests that the premise is inaccurate.
I have to call you out on your circular reasoning. You are simply claiming that the arguments I have given against Ex Nihilo MUST be false ... because we humans turned out so badly. Have you considered that mankind is flawed because Ex Nihilo is a false assumption to begin with?
huckelberry wrote:I am not particularly sold on the idea that reason is adaquate to always choose good. I think love is necessary.
And if God is creating every single aspect of an individual from God's own mind, and can create any kind of being that is logically possible, you don't think that God can create more loving beings?
If all existence is purely the result of God's own imagination, then God indeed controls
everything and God himself determined everything that would ever happen even before God created anything.
huckelberry wrote: I do suspect that the LDS view does not really propose our free will originates in an eternal character but like your sister forms of Christianity that all the free will we possess comes from God. Otherwise if our intelligneces were free unto themselves their progession could be self initialted and self sustained
I think that free will IS an eternal character. The problem is that we were far inferior intelligences, and therefore, we were in a state that did not allow us to act out our free will. We had no power, glory, dominion, etc. Giving us the power to act is how I understand that God allows us to have free will. This is why you see LDS scripture with statements like
"that they may act, rather than be acted upon."or
"Man {his intelligence} was also in the beginning with God... was not created or made, neither indeed can be.
30 All truth/intelligence is independent in that sphere in which God has placed it, to act for itself, otherwise there is no existence.
31 Behold, here is the agency of man, and here is the condemnation of man; because that which was from the beginning is plainly manifest unto them, and they receive not the light.
32 And every man whose spirit receiveth not the light is under condemnation." (D&C 93)
-7up