steve7150 said:
I'd be interested to know how you define free will and whether or not you think you have free will.Sounds like an intellectually acceptable form of Calvinism since there is really no so called "free will" on the part of the person who never hears the gospel.
I can't figure out why you think people lack free will according to Molinism.
According to Molinism, God surveyed what free agents would freely do in every possible world and then created the world that has an optimal balance between saved and unsaved. (The best world would of course have 100% saved, but this world is not feasible without stripping free will agents of their freedom.)
This is different than the classic Arminian view that God looked ahead through the corridors of time, saw what every creature did and then calls those who chose to believe in him his elect.
Arminians and Calvinist can agree that God's omniscience would allow him to know what every free-will agent would do in any situation even before a single one was created and did anything. (I'm not sure whether or not Open Theists would accept this.)
As far as I can see, God's knowledge of what every free agent would do (not what they did), in no way strips free agents of their free will or the responsibility that comes with the exercise of it; instead, it highlights God's amazing omniscience.