The Problem of Evil & Freewill Your argument seems to me to take the following form,
1. If free will succeeds as a defense of POE, then God must allow for free will must exist.
2. God doesn’t allow for free will.
3. Therefore, free will doesn’t succeed as a defense of POE.
I would like to take objection to your second premise. You say that if God allowed for free will, he wouldn’t make the stakes of going to heaven or going to hell so high. Eternal pain and eternal joy are too important, you say, that no one would choose to do otherwise. I think this is clearly not the case. A counterexample: smoking— most smokers understand, deep down to their cores, that smoking will kill them. That is high, eternal stakes for them. Yet they decide to keep smoking.
As you say, God allows us to choose to do good or do evil, and the consequences of doing either are clear. We know the stakes at the beginning of the game. If we truly had no choice over it, if it were truly an “offer we can’t refuse”, then more believers in God would act strictly in line with his teachings. But this, as we both know, is not the case.
I think a stronger second premise for this argument would be that of divine determinism. This argument would take this form:
1. If free will succeeds as a defense of POE, then God must allow for free will to exist.
2. God doesn’t allow for free will, because he decides what everyone does.
3. Therefore, free will doesn’t succeed as a defence of POE.
I think this argument is in line with yours, but it is a stronger statement. Yours says we can’t choose for ourselves because we know the stakes of going to heaven or hell. Mine says we can’t choose for ourselves, because our all-powerful God writes everything that happens in the world. If this is the case, free will can’t exist and therefore the problem of evil can’t be defended because God is directly responsible for the evils in the world.
Let me know what you think.