Philosopher Greg Welty contributed a chapter entitled ‘Molinist Gunslingers: God and the Authorship of Sin’, to a book devoted to answering the charge that Calvinism makes God the author of sin (Calvinism and the Problem of Evil). Welty argues that Molinism has the same problems as Calvinism concerning God’s relationship to sin, regardless of what view of human freedom Molinism may affirm. The Molinist believes that God generally uses his knowledge of the possible choices of libertarianly free creatures in order to accomplish his will. (This knowledge is typically categorized as residing within God’s middle knowledge.) But affirming libertarian freedom for humans, he argues, does not help in dealing with the question of God’s relationship t...
I raise two challenges for theological determinism. The first challenge concerns the accounts of hum...
What is the driving force behind salvation? Is it God’s sovereign will, enacting His efficacious gra...
The dissertation is divided into two parts. The first part constitutes a critique of the two most po...
Molinists generally see Calvinism as possessing certain liabilities from which Molinism is immune. F...
The debate concerning human free will, human moral culpability, and God’s sovereignty has raged for ...
One of the most discussed topics on the nature of God, in Christian circles today, is the subject of...
Molinism, which says that God has middle knowledge, offers one of the most impressive and popular wa...
The dissertation examines the two most important criticisms offered in the literature, both ancient ...
John Martin Fischer’s charge that Molinism does not offer a unique answer to the dilemma of divine f...
Molinism is founded on two ‘pillars’, namely, the view that human beings possess libertarian free wi...
This paper argues that Molinism best rebuts the problem of natural evil when compared to the attempt...
Molinists hold that there are contingently true counterfactuals about what agents would do if put in...
Molinists hold that there are contingently true counterfactuals about what agents would do if put in...
Hard determinism, in theological dress, holds that there is no human free will since God is the suff...
This dissertation addresses a particular issue within the soteriological problem of evil: Would an o...
I raise two challenges for theological determinism. The first challenge concerns the accounts of hum...
What is the driving force behind salvation? Is it God’s sovereign will, enacting His efficacious gra...
The dissertation is divided into two parts. The first part constitutes a critique of the two most po...
Molinists generally see Calvinism as possessing certain liabilities from which Molinism is immune. F...
The debate concerning human free will, human moral culpability, and God’s sovereignty has raged for ...
One of the most discussed topics on the nature of God, in Christian circles today, is the subject of...
Molinism, which says that God has middle knowledge, offers one of the most impressive and popular wa...
The dissertation examines the two most important criticisms offered in the literature, both ancient ...
John Martin Fischer’s charge that Molinism does not offer a unique answer to the dilemma of divine f...
Molinism is founded on two ‘pillars’, namely, the view that human beings possess libertarian free wi...
This paper argues that Molinism best rebuts the problem of natural evil when compared to the attempt...
Molinists hold that there are contingently true counterfactuals about what agents would do if put in...
Molinists hold that there are contingently true counterfactuals about what agents would do if put in...
Hard determinism, in theological dress, holds that there is no human free will since God is the suff...
This dissertation addresses a particular issue within the soteriological problem of evil: Would an o...
I raise two challenges for theological determinism. The first challenge concerns the accounts of hum...
What is the driving force behind salvation? Is it God’s sovereign will, enacting His efficacious gra...
The dissertation is divided into two parts. The first part constitutes a critique of the two most po...