This Is Why God Does Not Forgive Satan And Fallen Angels FYTube



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Title: This Is Why God Does Not Forgive Satan And Fallen Angels

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44 Comments

  1. The traditional view of evil as permanent in the portrayal of agents poses a fundamental problem: it seemingly strips these "agents" of their agency. Consider fallen angels depicted as a deteriorated stone wall. Over time, parts of the wall have crumbled, making the wall "evil" and subject to judgment as defective. However, the wall lacks the inherent capability to restore itself to a "good" condition. This analogy raises a critical question: if the angels actively chose to become evil, logically, they should also possess the capacity to choose goodness. Conversely, if their state of evil is fixed without their direct choice—akin to the wall deteriorating through no fault of its own—then their evil nature is not a result of genuine agency but a condition that befell them.

    If we accept that angels participated in their transition to evil within the bounds of their agency, then those who remained good have similarly chosen righteousness. This logic implies that just as the righteous could potentially fall, those who have fallen could also repent and return to goodness. If true moral agency exists, the possibility for change—both to and from a state of evil—must be acknowledged for all beings endowed with free will.

    The only way both these views could be held together consistent with Christian orthodoxy is to say that all fallen angels can repent in principle but actively perpetually chooses not to repent.

    Freedom to repent is only possible and attained by Gods grace and separate from redemption by Gods will.
    Where God is willfully extending a hand out in invitation for redemption, it can only take form after God takes the initiative, wants it and if it is in his plan. It is a relational dynamic where God takes initiative to invite redemption and giving autonomy to the respondent fallen agent. Whether angelic or human, said agent has a choice to make in regards to this merciful grace given by God.

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