The Freedom of the Will
- Item #: BKFOWJE
Noteworthy is Edwards's essential agreement with the empiricist John Locke that the question of whether or not the will was "free" was badly posed; the real issue, he said, is whether the person is free. The majority of the work, however, deals with the will's freedom (in contrast to the freedom of the whole person) as it seeks to refute the Arminian notion of the will. For Edwards, the errors of the Arminians essentially resulted from denying God's absolute sovereignty; in contrast to Calvinist orthodoxy, Arminians insisted that secondary causes could operate in the individual apart from the influence of the divine will. This notion of the will's freedom had Pelagian roots, which Edwards rightly exposed. Furthermore, the refusal of the Arminians to acknowledge the individuals total corruption promoted further error. The will cannot be free as the Arminians would have it, Edwards argued, for true freedom can only belong to God, who is self-sustaining and therefore free from other influences.
- BINDING: HARDBACK
- AUTHOR: JONATHAN EDWARDS