Skip to main content.

The Freedom of the Will

Gelesen von LibriVox Volunteers

(4,071 Sterne; 7 Bewertungen)

As religion is the great business, for which we are created, and on which our happiness depends; and as religion consists in an intercourse between ourselves and our Maker; and so has its foundation in God's nature and ours, and in the relation that God and we stand in to each other; therefore a true knowledge of both must be needful in order to true religion. But the knowledge of ourselves consists chiefly in right apprehensions concerning those two chief faculties of our nature, the Understanding and Will. Both are very important: yet the science of the latter must be confessed to be of greatest moment; inasmuch as all virtue and religion have their seat more immediately in the will, consisting more especially in right acts and habits of this faculty. And the grand question about the Freedom of the Will, is the main point that belongs to the science of the Will. Therefore I say, the importance of this subject greatly demands the attention of Christians, and especially of Divines. - Summary from the preface (13 hr 32 min)

Chapters

Preface

14:38

Read by Philip Naudus

I.I - Concerning the nature of the will

11:45

Read by Philip Naudus

I.II - Concerning the determination of the Will

26:40

Read by Philip Naudus

I.III - Concerning the meaning of the terms Necessity, Impossibility, Inability…

21:10

Read by Jim Locke

I.IV - Of the distinction of natural and moral necessity and inability

19:50

Read by Jim Locke

I.V - Concerning the notion of liberty, and of moral agency

9:52

Read by Jim Locke

II.I - Showing the manifest inconsistence of the Arminian notion of liberty of …

10:46

Read by Jim Locke

II.II - Several supposed ways of evading the foregoing reasoning considered

13:49

Read by Jim Locke

II.III - Whether any event whatsoever, and volition in particular, can come to …

16:36

Read by Jim Locke

II.IV - Whether volition can arise without a cause, through the activity of the…

11:30

Read by Jim Locke

II.V - Showing, that if the things asserted in these evasions should be suppose…

10:44

Read by Jim Locke

II.VI - Concerning the will's determining in things which are perfectly indiffe…

19:43

Read by Jim Locke

II.VII - Concerning the notion of liberty of will consisting in indifference

25:23

Read by Jim Locke

II.VIII - Concerning the supposed liberty of the will, as opposite to all neces…

9:23

Read by Jim Locke

II.IX - Of the connection of the acts of the will with the dictates of the unde…

19:03

Read by Jim Locke

II.X - Volition necessarily connected with the influence of motives; with parti…

34:51

Read by Jim Locke

II.XI - The evidence of God's certain foreknowledge of the volitions of moral a…

51:00

Read by Jim Locke

II.XII - God's certain foreknowledge of the future volitions of moral agents, i…

37:10

Read by Jim Locke

II.XIII - Whether we suppose the volitions of moral agents to be connected with…

8:59

Read by Jim Locke

III.I - God's moral excellency necessary, yet virtuous and praiseworthy

9:37

Read by Jim Locke

III.II - The acts of the will of the human soul of Jesus Christ necessarily hol…

35:58

Read by Jim Locke

III.III - The case of such as are given up of god to sin, and of fallen man in …

18:12

Read by Jim Locke

III.IV - Command, and obligation to obedience, consistent with moral inability …

28:52

Read by Jim Locke

III.V - That sincerity of desires and endeavors, which is supposed to excuse in…

23:16

Read by Jim Locke

III.VI - Liberty of indifference, not only not necessary to virtue, but utterly…

23:32

Read by Jim Locke

III.VII - Arminian notions of moral agency inconsistent with all influence of m…

17:44

Read by Jim Locke

IV.I - The essence of the virtue and vice of dispositions of the heart, and act…

18:43

Read by Jim Locke

IV.II - The falseness and inconsistence of that metaphysical notion of action, …

23:17

Read by Jim Locke

The reasons why some think it contrary to common Sense, to suppose those things…

15:29

Read by Jim Locke

IV.IV - It is agreeable to common sense, and the natural notions of mankind, to…

23:00

Read by Jim Locke

IV.V - Concerning those objections, that this scheme of necessity renders all m…

17:56

Read by Jim Locke

IV.VI - Concerning that objection against the doctrine which has been maintaine…

8:14

Read by Jim Locke

IV.VII - Concerning the necessity of the divine will

20:48

Read by Jim Locke

IV.VIII - Some further objections against the moral necessity of god's volition…

30:29

Read by Jim Locke

IV.IX - Concerning that objection against the doctrine which has been maintaine…

34:49

Read by Jim Locke

IV.X - Concerning sin's first entrance into the world

5:41

Read by Jim Locke

IV.XI - Of a supposed inconsistence of these principles, with God's moral chara…

12:29

Read by Jim Locke

IV.XII - Of a supposed tendency of these principles to atheism and licentiousne…

8:21

Read by Jim Locke

IV.XIII - Concerning that objection against the reasoning, by which the Calvini…

13:19

Read by Jim Locke

Conclusion

23:23

Read by Jim Locke

Appendix

26:39

Read by Jim Locke

Bewertungen

labor of love

(4 Sterne)

very tedious but you can still hear the labor of love on Jonathan Edwards part.

(4 Sterne)

It’s a good book, but the recording is poor.