Divine Predestination and Human Culpability
This article examines the theological tension between divine predestination and human moral responsibility through the lens of three major Jewish thinkers: the Lubavitcher Rebbe's understanding of the Tree of Knowledge as divinely preordained, the Izbica (Ishbitzer) Rebbe's radical theology of divine causation, and Jonathan Eybeschutz's approach to divine foreknowledge. We explore how these theological frameworks illuminate contemporary debates about addiction, particularly the tension between the disease model and moral model of addiction. The analysis reveals how theological concepts of predestination and divine approval of sin parallel modern medical and ethical debates about whether addiction represents illness or moral failure, offering insights into human agency, divine sovereignty, and the nature of moral responsibility.