Sovereignty of Time and Free Will

Free will is a gift of God.  If the gift of life was the first gift then the second gift was the gift of choice; the gift of free will.  And that gift must have been given before the fall because without it, it would have been impossible to fall.

Often, we commingle God’s sovereignty with His omniscience. The argument goes like this; if God is sovereign in that His will can not be overruled, then my free will can not overrule God’s sovereignty. If God is omniscient then He already knows what I will choose. Because He already knows my choice and because I can not overrule His sovereignty He has willed my choice. I do not have free will and therefore I am not responsible for that choice.

This might be an improper understanding of both free will and sovereignty. Our freewill can not be juxtaposed against God’s sovereignty rather our freewill is an extension of God’s absolute sovereignty.  And, because God has extended His sovereignty we are accountable to God for our exercise of that sovereignty.

I once commanded a company of tanks.  Fourteen of them.  They were my tanks and it was my company.  But they were not mine in that I could do with them as I pleased.  They had been given to me by my battalion commander, who had received them from his brigade commander, who had received them from the State of Oregon; etc., etc.,…. But what had I received?  I hadn’t received fourteen tanks, to do with as I pleased, rather I had received fourteen tanks to do with within the confines of my superior’s intent.

This is where morality starts.  Whether or not I was a good or bad commander would be determined by how well I did with those tanks relative to what my superiors had intended.  This is true of us and God.  We have been given free will.  We can do with that free will what we please however, what we do will be evaluated based on what God intended for us to do with that free will.  With free will comes sovereignty.  The gift of free will is the gift of God’s sovereignty.

God’s sovereignty is absolute. Is the sovereignty that God extends to us also absolute? In one sense no and in another sense yes. Your sovereignty is only limited by time and space. Your sovereignty only exists within the context of your life. It begins when you are born and it ends when you die. Each act of the individual will exists within the context of where you are and when you are there. Additionally, your sovereignty is also limited by the truth. You can not will something in contradiction to the truth. This is connected to the first limit in that the truth of where you are and when you are can not be violated. Finally, your sovereignty can not be used to trump the sovereignty of God. And as the second is connected to the first the third is connected to the second. Your will can not violate the truth of God. The limits on your sovereignty seem to be self evident. It is where our sovereignty is absolute that creates an apparent problem with evil.

God will not violate our sovereignty apart from the constraints mentioned above.  Every evil act, whether intentional or unintentional, is an example of God’s refusal to intervene.  Those refusals to intervene are each instances of God maintaining the gift of your sovereignty.  That gift will belong to you in a very absolute sense right up until it doesn’t.  I call this understanding of free will “God’s delegation of His sovereignty for a time.”  The act of delegation is not an act of abdication and does not reduce sovereignty.  He has given it to you in that you can exercise it.  He has retained it for Himself in that you will be held accountable for that exercise.  You are free within His absolute sovereignty.  But why?

Back to my command for a moment.  We were in the midst of our gunnery cycle.  It is the central component of the evaluation of our success.  How many tank crews could we get through the gunnery qualifications?  One of the limiting factors was the limited amount of range time.  Our company was first on the range and the tracers in our ammunition where catching the grass on fire.  When the fire would get too large the range safeties would close the range to put out the fire.  Each time this occurred we lost valuable range time.  I told my soldiers from day one; don’t worry about the fires.  Someone else is worrying about that.  Right up until they tell you to leave the range I want you focused on qualification.

One morning there was a huge fire.  But the safeties weren’t closing the range.  I could hear the main guns and the rattle of the .50 cals as my guys kept working through gunnery.  The fire got bigger and bigger.  Finally, the call came to clear the range and by then the fire was immense.  Each of my platoons called in and reported their movements.  Each of them except First Platoon and First Platoon was lead by my newest, least experienced, least confident platoon leader.  I could not get ahold of him, and so I could only wait.  I couldn’t yet hear the explosions of ammunition cooking off so my career wasn’t yet ruined but it was just a matter of time.

When first platoon finally appeared all four tanks were rolling onto the bore sight line.  When I finally calmed down enough to get the platoon leader’s report he told me that he was so focused on Gunnery that he didn’t see how large the fire was until they were ordered to leave.  He heard me calling for a report but he didn’t have time.  The fire was immense and it was burning right across the only road he knew as an exit.  He asked his platoon sergeant if there was another way and then went on the platoon frequency to organize the platoon around following that platoon sergeant.  He simply forgot to come back to the company frequency to report.  What I knew in that moment was that I had a subordinate leader that I could trust to make decisions within the framework of my intent.  I had given him a platoon and he was doing with it that which I would have liked him to do. That is how your free will operates in respect to God. It is what allows you to accept or reject His love and it is what allows Him to condemn you in your disobedience.

God doesn’t need to know who will be obedient. He has delegated his sovereignty in order that we can know what it is to love Him; in order that we can know what it is to be loved by Him. The sovereignty that has been extended to us is for the purpose of loving Him and loving others as ourselves. When you return to Him you will be held accountable for what you have done with your sovereignty in regard to His intent. And make no mistake, His absolute sovereignty will require absolute accountability.

“When the Son of Man comes in his glory, and all the angels with him, then he will sit on his glorious throne.”

Matthew 25:31

If the gift of life was the first gift and the second gift was the gift of free will, then the third and greatest gift was the gift of His son as the penalty for the misuse of the first two gifts. All three were necessary for an inferior being to live with a superior being in the context of a relationship of love. Don’t miss out on that relationship. It too is a choice and it is available to everyone! When you are out of time you will be out of sovereignty.

Thanks for reading and do not forget to subscribe to my e-mail below.  I am working on some great things and I would hate for you to miss out.

Image by anncapictures from Pixabay


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The Eternal Moment and The Morality of Time

Recently in our Bible study we were discussing universalism. The universalist, in short, believes that all mankind will be saved. One pro-universalist argument is that it would not matter how long it would take but eventually everyone would be made subject to God and eventually submit themselves to Him. No one who knew God’s love could resist Him forever. Another is that a good God could not punish someone forever for a finite infraction against his law. However, these universalist arguments are based on a flawed understanding of the relationship of eternity and time and an incomplete understanding of what it means to be good.

Eternity cannot be understood as billions more years after you have already existed for billions of years in an unending line of time.  If this were true, then time would have to extend eternally in both directions; both forward and backward in order to understand God as having no beginning and no end; the traditional understanding of God’s eternality.

In physics there is a distance, at the smallest level, in which you can not go any smaller without loosing the concept of distance.  The question of what is smaller than this distance can not be answered in terms of these distances and so can not be distance as we know it.  This is called Planck distance.  To go smaller something else, entirely other than distance, would have to exist.  The same is true of time; there is also a Planck time.  Before the beginning, something other than time existed, or exists, before time.   Therefore, eternity must be something other than time.  Perhaps, it is more precise, although imperfect because it is also being expressed in terms of time, to think of eternity as a single moment that exists forever.  I am not yet sure what that would be, but it would be different than what we currently experience as time.

On the way home I started thinking about what that eternal moment would be like and could we enjoy existing in it.  I am most fortunate because there have been moments in my life in which I would like to exist forever.  Maybe those moments are imperfect similes of the eternal moment.  One example of an eternal moment for me was the first hug between Sarah and I on my return from a deployment into a combat theater of operations.  I can still feel her presence in that moment.  Every curve of her body as she pressed hers into mine and I pressed mine into hers.  The smell of her skin the warmth of her breath…; I can remember it all.  I had not seen her and had been existing in a reality in which I might not have gotten to see her again.  I missed her and longed for her and in that moment of reunion I wanted to be fully in her presence and not for mere physical gratification but because I loved her and she loved me.

What made that moment eternally significant, or at the very least more significant than every other hug before or since, was the gratitude that came with the fact of this specific hug’s existence as contrasted by the real possibility of its non existence.  Our first kiss, the first time she told me she loved me, the moment her dad walked her to me down the isle at our wedding, the moment she told me she was pregnant, and the moment we found out together that she was pregnant again. All significant because they could not exist on the strength of my own will and had to exist in a context of gratitude towards something apart from me.  All moments I could live in forever.

But those aren’t the only moments of my existence.  If there are moments in which I could live forever aren’t there also moments that I would rather had never existed at all?  There seems to me to be two kinds of these moments.  Those in which there is pain inflicted on me, a recent trip to the dentist would suffice as proof of these, and those in which I inflict pain on others.  And not by accident but by intent.  That might be an oversimplification because I spend a lot of time at work not inflicting any pain that aren’t really painful in and of themselves but that are also not significant enough that I would think them worthy of living in forever or of eternal significance.  But there are some moments that are significantly painful enough or in which I know I have inflicted a significant enough of a wound that I would rather they had not existed at all.  I won’t list those here because the pain can be overwhelming and, well,  I would rather you not know the pain I have inflicted on others to my own shame.   It also seems to me these moments are defined by the justice owed or the justice demanded.  I demand justice for the pain inflicted on me and I owe justice for the pain I inflicted on others.

If our understanding of eternity as a single moment existing forever is more accurate then heaven could be thought of as existing forever in a moment of perfect love, held there by perfect power, in a state of perfect gratitude that the moment can exist inviolate of perfect justice despite who we were.  Hell would then be existing forever in a moment of perfect justice held by perfect power in the perfect knowledge of who you are.  One you would never want out of and the other you could never escape.

With this understanding of heaven and hell the argument that a good god would never subject a finite being to an eternal punishment starts to look more and more like a straw man.  Eternity simply is a binary in which you exist in one of the two states above.  The reality is that justice is demanded and if you demanded justice would your demand be satisfied by something less?  No, a good god would provide perfect justice or he would be a fraud.  If injustice is evil and justice is good then isn’t an appeal for justice an appeal to a higher good and if justice is denied isn’t that denial of justice just another injustice.  God’s goodness is tied to justice and in the face of injustice hell is required.  The straw man is only put forth in order to deceive ourselves into thinking that we might escape the justice that is owed, by a good god.  God’s mercy is appealed to at the expense of His goodness.

No, hell is necessary for God to be good in the face of the injustice of man.  Or more Biblically accurate hell is necessary for God to be good in the face of Satan’s injustice while hell is merely convenient for God to be good in the face of the injustice of man.  Heaven is not necessary it merely is as the abode of perfection.  Philosophically the existence of heaven and hell are not hard to work out.  However, until Jesus, bringing man into heaven was philosophically impossible.  Jesus as an eternal being sacrificed in a single moment is still sufficient for your injustice, even if it were only in a single moment. Your single injustice against an eternal God would still warrant an eternal justice.  That Jesus is sufficient and obedient is the mercy that saves you from the justice of God’s goodness without violating either His goodness or His love for us.

Anyway, I am more philosopher than physicist so don’t forget to remind me how I misused Planck’s ideas in the comments below. I am, however, confident in the sufficiency of Christ!

Thanks for reading and do not forget to subscribe to my e-mail below.  I am working on some great things and I would hate for you to miss out.

Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay


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