7/5/2021 What Is Fatalism? What Is Determinism?

Exploring Christian Worldview - ONLINE — Grace Bible Church

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Let’s begin with some general definitions of fatalism and determinism and some related terms:

Determinism: The view that every event has a cause and that everything in the universe is absolutely dependent on and governed by causal laws. Determinism is related to fatalism, since determinists believe that all events, including human actions, are caused by something else. Determinism is typically thought to be incompatible with free will.

Fatalism: The belief that “what will be will be,” since all past, present, and future events have already been predetermined by God or another all-powerful force, such as “Fate.” In religion, fatalism may sometimes be confused with predestination, the doctrine that God chooses those who go to heaven before they are even born. It’s important to note that the Bible teaches predestination but not to the exclusion of free will; thus, the Bible does not teach fatalism.

Free will: The freedom of choice or self-determination that human beings possess; those who believe in free will believe that, given any situation, a person could have done other than what he did. Philosophers have argued that free will is incompatible with determinism and fatalism.

Indeterminism: The view that there are events that do not have any cause; many proponents of free will believe that acts of choice are independent of any physiological or psychological cause.

Theological fatalism or theological determinism is an attempt to demonstrate a logical contradiction between an omniscient God and free will, where free will is defined as the ability to choose between alternatives. In this it is similar in purpose to the conundrum “Can an omnipotent God make a rock too heavy for Him to lift?”

Theological fatalism’s premises are stated as follows: God is omniscient. Since God is omniscient, God has infallible foreknowledge. If God has infallible foreknowledge that tomorrow you will engage in an event (mow the lawn), then you must invariably engage in that event (mowing the lawn).

Therefore, according to theological fatalism, free will is not possible, since you have no alternative except to participate in the event (mow the lawn). If you do not mow the lawn, then God is not omniscient. But if you mow the lawn, then you don’t have free will, on account of your inability to choose an alternative.

Here is an opposing argument to theological fatalism: God is omniscient. Since God is omniscient, He is also infallible. If God has infallible foreknowledge that tomorrow you will mow the lawn, then you will freely choose to do so, not out of obligation or lack of choice. You still have free will to mow the lawn or not mow it; God merely knows your choice before you make it. You are not obliged to mow the lawn tomorrow any more than you are to play tennis or bake a cake. If you were going to change your mind, God would have seen that also, so you still have free will in all matters. Also, you will still make the same choices (exercising your free will), even if God chose not to see the future. God’s passive foreknowledge of the future does not alter your free will.

There is a vast difference between fatalism, chance (or fortune), and predestination.

Fatalism teaches that there is a blind, impersonal force over which no one has control—not even God—and that events are swept along by this blind, purposeless power.

Chance (or fortune) is a capricious force that supposedly causes things to happen “luckily,” without any control or direction by God. In a world ruled by chance, God can foresee what will happen, but that is all. Everything depends on mere luck. And if the advocate of chance is asked why or how things come to pass, he has no reply except to shrug and say, “It just happened.”

Predestination, the doctrine of the Bible, says that God has a purpose and He is working all things out according to His own will and purpose (Ephesians 1:11Daniel 4:35Isaiah 14:2446:10). Predestination teaches that God neither does nor permits anything except what serves His purpose (Psalm 33:11). This means that GOD IS the SOVEREIGN of the world, the One who does all things as He wills.

Those who blindly believe que sera, sera, or “whatever will be, will be,” are as wrong as the advocates of chance. It is true that events are certain, but only so because of the sovereign God who fulfills His own decrees.

Serious students of the Bible do not believe that things “just happen.” Christians reject fatalism and godless determinism. Rather, they understand that a wise, holy, good, and sovereign God has control of every detail of life (Matthew 10:29–30). The man who does not really want God to have this control or who despises the truth of God’s sovereignty does not love God and does not want God in his life. But God is sovereign, and He cannot deny Himself.

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Published by Dave Winstead

I am the Chairman Of FaithByTheWord Ministries in Burlington, NC.

One thought on “7/5/2021 What Is Fatalism? What Is Determinism?

  1. The notion of “possibility” is a tool for dealing with matters of uncertainty. For example, we’re driving down the highway and we notice there is a traffic light up ahead. Will it be red when we arrive, or will it be green? We don’t know. We are uncertain. So, we imagine two possible futures, one in which the light is red, and another in which the light is green.

    Not knowing what “will” happen, we imagine the two things that “can” happen in order to prepare ourselves for what “does” happen.

    That’s the logical function of the terms “possibility” and “can” (and similar words like “ability”, and “might”).

    You decide to slow down, just in case the light will be red. But, when we reach the light, it changes to green.
    “Why did you slow down?” I ask.
    “Because it was possible that the light would still be red.”, you reply.
    “But it was green! So, because of determinism, it was always impossible that it would be red.” I retort.
    “But it could have been red!” you say.
    “No, it could not have been otherwise!” I insist. “So, why did you slow down?”

    The fact that something did not happen never implies that it could not have happened. In fact, whenever we say that something “could have” happened, it always logically implies that it definitely did not happen.

    The words “can” and “will” have two very distinct meanings. If something “will” happen then it will happen. But if something “can” happen then it may happen or it may never happen.

    So, what about the deterministic implication that, given the same person at the same time with the same choice that “he could not have done otherwise”?

    Well, that’s out the window. It simply does not hold. All that the determinist can validly claim is that, given the same person, etc., “he would not have done otherwise”.

    Note that “could” is the past tense of “can”, and “would” is the past tense of “will”.

    Note that what “can” happen constrains what “will” happen (if it cannot happen then it will not happen). But the opposite is not true. What “will” happen does not constrain what “can” happen (what “can” happen is only constrained by our imagination and our ability to carry out that option, even if we never get around to doing so).

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