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A conversation on God's providence
I recently read an article in which the scientist argues that free will is a myth. The writer from their research proposes that every action is mechanically engineered by neurons, hormones environment, training etc. Now I am no neuroscientist or any genius, but may I humbly suggest that without free will, such subatomic reactions are not even possible. The further and deeper we reach, as humans, in our attempt to explain our origins outside of God as creator, the more of God’s benevolent nature is revealed. See, free will is not just crucial to man’s identity, it is in-fact reflective of our very origins.
This week, we are honored to have The Rt Rev. Professor Emmanuel Y. Lartey on our show for a chat on this topic: Not so Lucky, a conversation on God’s Providence. And let me say, if our maker wanted to make a robotic being without choice, He would have made a perfect machine without error.
A conversation on God's providence
I recently read an article in which the scientist argues that free will is a myth. The writer from their research proposes that every action is mechanically engineered by neurons, hormones environment, training etc. Now I am no neuroscientist or any genius, but may I humbly suggest that without free will, such subatomic reactions are not even possible. The further and deeper we reach, as humans, in our attempt to explain our origins outside of God as creator, the more of God’s benevolent nature is revealed. See, free will is not just crucial to man’s identity, it is in-fact reflective of our very origins.
This week, we are honored to have The Rt Rev. Professor Emmanuel Y. Lartey on our show for a chat on this topic: Not so Lucky, a conversation on God’s Providence. And let me say, if our maker wanted to make a robotic being without choice, He would have made a perfect machine without error.