S
Seeking12
Guest
It is not; in case anyone has forgotten the title of the thread.Why is predestination wrong?
It is not; in case anyone has forgotten the title of the thread.Why is predestination wrong?
I often find scripture to “stretch” me.It is a bit of a stretch to say that “God wants everybody to be saved” is the equivalent of “God will do everything He can to bring that about.”
No. God has ordained that we should choose.If God wants EVERYONE to be saved, then they will be.
I am sure, in your world, it means that. This is not what the Apostles taught.Code:Since we know that not everyone will be saved, then it is clear that this passage CANNOT MEAN that God wants everyone to be saved.
Evidently it is.It’s not that hard to understand!![]()
You are on the right track. God has designed humans so that they have a choice. they can obey, or disobey. Ths is what it means to be made in the image and likeness of God. He created the angels with this ability also, and some chose not to serve Him.]No, I am saying that man disobeys by his own will. But this is as God designed it. Why does a Tasmanian Devil eat lizards, frogs and insects? Because that’s how God designed him
Indeed, and by doing so, disqualify themselves for eternal life.God doesn’t cause men to sin. They sin of their own accord.
Yes, we are in agreement on that point.Code:He allows it. Just as you said, they CHOOSE this course. God does not make them choose it.
You are looking at this from the fallen human perspective of what is justice and not from God’s purpose for creation. We are secondary to the primary, which is the glorification of God.
Here are few versus to ponder just from Romans and John.
Romans 9 (poor Pharaoh) For the Scripture says to Pharaoh, “FOR THIS VERY PURPOSE I RAISED YOU UP, TO DEMONSTRATE MY POWER IN YOU, AND THAT MY NAME MIGHT BE PROCLAIMED THROUGHOUT THE WHOLE EARTH.”
The thing molded will not say to the molder, “Why did you make me like this,” will it?
What if God, although willing to demonstrate His wrath and to make His power known, endured with much patience vessels of wrath prepared for destruction? 23 And He did so to make known the riches of His glory upon vessels of mercy, which He prepared beforehand for glory
9 "I ask on their behalf; I do not ask on behalf of the world, but of those whom You have given Me; for they are Yours; and all things that are Mine are Yours, and Yours are Mine; and **I have been glorified in them. **
Father, I desire that they also, whom You have given Me, be with Me where I am, so that they may see My glory which You have given Me, for You loved Me before the foundation of the world.
You see this is about God’s glory primarily, we are secondary. If one is part of the “elect”, then what a communion one will have with the Trinity, better than the angels.
Assuming that I am a “Good” judge? I will have to do whatever the law requires.But you did not answer my question, would you send your daughter or son to eternal damnation if you have the power to give them the grace to change? I would really like an unequivocal answer from you, personally.
PEPCIS:![]()
can’t, and won’t, answer the question because it is invalid. God does not give power to EVERYONE to believe. That was a notion which was taught by Pelagius in the 3rd and 4th century which the Catholic Church condemned at the Council of Carthage (418) as Heresy.But [the question] is not invalid. It is a hypothetical question. I am no asking about what God will do. I am asking what will YOU do? So IF YOU are a judge.and one of your errant daughters/sons has been brought before you because they have committed a crime. You can have them electrocuted or you can have them jailed and while in jail have them reformed. These are all in your power. What will you do?
But there most certainly is. God is the perfect judge. You are trying to get me to say that if I judge such and such a way, why wouldn’t God judge just like a man? Well, that’s because God’s ways are so far higher than that of man’s.There is nothing invalid about that question.
No, it only makes me human. God is still God, and His ways are still perfect. If the law required me to condemn my son to death, me (being the imperfect creature that I am) would still choose AGAINST THE LAW. That would make me a BAD JUDGE. I thank God that He is the GOOD AND PERFECT JUDGE.I think you are afraid to answer because deep in your heart you know that if you are the parent and you have the power, the ability to change your son, you will choose that option because you love your son. But if you choose that option then that makes your more merciful than God.
PEPCIS said:God does not love “unconditionally” and the Bible does not teach that.benedictus:![]()
Yes, He does and yes it does.
I not only believe it, I proved it by the Bible. You, on the other hand, make BOLD claims that you cannot Biblically back up. I’m still waiting… ::taps foot impatiently::If you really believe that then that is really sad.
PEPCIS said:
*]Christ died for “us” (that would be the elect) while we were still sinners.
*]Christ died for the elect ONLY.
benedictus:![]()
God created all human beings.
Ahhhhhh. Now THAT’S Biblical!If Christ died only for the elect (for which there is really no criteria save for god’s whim), therefore He purposely created some with the view of saving them (the elect) and He purposely created some with the view of damning them (the damned).
Yes.So even before He created them, He knew he was going to damn them.
No. They sin of their own accord.He was gong to make them sin so that He can damn them.
No, He did not make them sin. They made themselves sin. Why do you keep on saying this, when you have already gone on record as saying that men cause themselves to sin?He is going to punish them fro all eternity for something they cannot help (because He himself made them sin).
Thanks!It is not; in case anyone has forgotten the title of the thread.
JWB152Yes. Some were predestined to salvation.You couldn’t be more wrong. Predestination has EVERYTHING to do with being here on earth, because it is our EARTHLY ACTIONS which speak of our HEAVENLY destinations.
Old Testament Israel entering into the Promised Land is a PICTURE of how God enacts salvation. In the OT, it was the salvation of a nation which rejected Him. In the NT, it is the salvation of a world that rejects Him.But the term itself “pre-destination”, means that even before we were born we have already been pre-destined.
I’m not sure why you would say that. Nothing I have said could be construed that way.So therefore our earthly actions were controlled by God.
I would agree with that statement. He doesn’t cause them to be bad. He just doesn’t give them the grace to change their nature, so they will NATURALLY choose what is bad.Those He has pre-destined to damnation will not be given the grace to be good.
As I have said above, nothing I have said could be construed this way.So taking into account all you have said, even our EARTLY ACTIONS have been pre-determined.
No, I agree that we have free will. Our wills, however, are extremely limited in what they can choose.That is why I have been saying over and over again, please bring in free-will into your arguments. We have free-will. It is only when you deny free-will that you come up with your “understanding” of pre-destination.
I agree. “Predestine” is only used in a positive manner as is "foreknew."God does not “know” anyone who is going to be condemned.God did not predestine before He foreknew, but for those whose merits He foresaw, He predestined their reward.
I agree. “Predestine” is only used in a positive manner as is "foreknew."God does not “know” anyone who is going to be condemned. Did God create all things including all men? Did God predestine some to salvation? Can the predestined to heaven refuse God’s predestination? If God created all men and destined some to heaven and the predestined to heaven cannot refuse His will; then did God, by default, predestined the rest to hell? What does logic tell you?
This is why Jesus states in Matthew 7:22-23 "Many will say to Me in that day, ‘Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in Your name, cast out demons in Your name, and done many wonders in Your name?’ 23 And then I will declare to them, ‘I never knew you; depart from Me, you who practice lawlessness!’
Romans 8:29 “For** whom He foreknew, He also predestined** to be conformed to the image of His Son, that He might be the firstborn among many brethren.”
1 Peter 1:1-2 “…To the pilgrims of the Dispersion in Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia, 2 elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father, in sanctification of the Spirit, for obedience and sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Christ:”
Mark 13:20 “And unless the Lord had shortened those days, no flesh would be saved; but for the elect’s sake, whom He chose, He shortened the days.”
Those whom He foreknew, He predestined, and chose them to be the elect. He “elected” them “according to” (as a result of) His “foreknowledge.”
In response to persons who insist that Romans 9 proves that God predestines without consideration for our own free will choices:
Romans 9:10-21 “And not only this, but when Rebecca also had conceived by one man, even by our father Isaac 11 (for the children not yet being born, nor having done any good or evil, that the purpose of God according to election might stand, not of works but of Him who calls), 12 it was said to her, “The older shall serve the younger.” 13 As it is written, “Jacob I have loved, but Esau I have hated.”
According to commentary in the Navarre Bible, “Esau I hated: this is a Semitic way of speaking, of a sort often found Scripture. God loves Esau, too, but compared with his preferential love for Jacob, his love for Esau looks like “hate.” Exaggeration is being used to make a point. Our Lord sometimes uses similar language in the Gospel–for example, when he compares the love he is owed with the love a person owes his parents (see MT 10:37…) God loves everything and everyone that he created (see Wis 11:24).” End of commentary.
Wisdom 11:24 “For you love all things that are and loathe nothing that you have made; for what you hated, you would not have fashioned.”
Continuing with Romans 9:14:
14 What shall we say then? Is there unrighteousness with God? Certainly not! 15 For He says to Moses, “I will have mercy on whomever I will have mercy, and I will have compassion on whomever I will have compassion.” 16 So then it is not of him who wills, nor of him who runs, but of God who shows mercy.
17 For the Scripture says to the Pharaoh, “For this very purpose I have raised you up, that I may show My power in you, and that My name may be declared in all the earth.” 18 Therefore He has mercy on whom He wills, and whom He wills He hardens.
19 You will say to me then, “Why does He still find fault? For who has resisted His will?” 20 But indeed, O man, who are you to reply against God? Will the thing formed say to him who formed it, “Why have you made me like this?” 21 Does not the potter have power over the clay, from the same lump to make one vessel for honor and another for dishonor?"
More commentary from the Navarre Bible: “God is not unjust, Paul says, when he distributes his grace unequally among men (v v. 14-18). He has mercy on whomever he chooses without that meaning he is unfair. However, if a person in the exercise of his freedom rejects God’s gifts, God respects that decision. Therefore, when Paul says that God "hardens the heart of whomever he wills” (v.18), this should be read as a typically biblical way of speaking–attributing to God’s action things that he merely permits. A sinner is always responsible for his own hardness of heart.
St. Thomas Aquinas explains this by using a simile: "Although the sun, for its part, enlightens all bodies, if it encounters an obstacle in a body it leaves the body in darkness, as happens to a house whose window shutters are closed. Clearly, the sun is not the cause of the house being darkened, since it does not act of its own accord in failing to light up the interior of the house; the cause of the darkness is the person who closed the shutters. So God chooses not to give [the light of] grace to those who put an obstacle in its way: (Summa theologiae, 1-2, 79, 3).
All we need to remember, then, is that God always offers man the opportunity to change and repent. Hence the psalmist’s call not to close our heart to God’s invitations: “O that today you would hearken to his voice? Harden not your hearts” (Ps 95:7-8)." End of Commentary.
This is such a difficult Scripture passage to understand. I hope this commentary helps.
SHW
I’m sorry, but God’s Word is the final arbiter in this matter. It matters NOT what you think (that “my” god is cruel, or whatever), or what you feel (that “my” god is unrighteous, or wicked). All that matters is what God’s Word says.I NEVER said that He was not for us. The question (may I remind you?) which Paul said, not me, is a RHETORICAL question. We KNOW that God is for us, therefore, if God is for us, then who, or what, could possibly be against us? Who could have the power to stop the work which God has begun?? Answer: NOBODY!
Yes, but you limit the US. My point here is that the US is more than just the small number of “Christians”. He is for all of us for the simple reason that He created us ALL in love.
Actually, you ARE being obtuse.I am sure that I am obtuse, even very obtuse with regards a lot of things but not on this one.
ROFLMBO!!! I’m reading this too narrowly??? Paul rendered it, by the power of the Holy Spirit, as narrowly targetting THOSE WHO LOVE GOD, TO THOSE WHO ARE THE CALLED ACCORDING TO HIS PURPOSE!!You are reading this verse too narrowly. It says "to them that love God, those who are called according to His purpose. "
I think that if you pursue this interpretation that you and I are finished our dialogue.First of all, how do you know that those whom He chose not to be reached by the Gospel has been called according to his purpose as well? You assume that his purpose is what YOU know his purpose to be but that His purpose is way bigger than your knowledge of it. You seem to like to limit God to your own image of Him.
“First of all, how do you know that those whom He chose not to be reached by the Gospel has been called according to his purpose as well?”
It is their fault. They live a life which is alien to God BY THEIR OWN CHOICE. You admit that they have free will. This is no different. 90% of the world has already heard the gospel, so you aren’t even talking about the 10% here. You’re just raising objections because you think that the picture that God projects of Himself in His Word is unjust and unrighteous.There are a lot of people who love God but who have not been reached by the Gospel. It is not their fault that they have not heard of Christ.
Exactly. They are WITHOUT EXCUSE.St Paul also wrote that God has written His law into all our hearts. So his purpose in one degree or another is made known to all man.
Maybe not, but the Holy Spirit did.Paul did not have US in mind when he wrote that.
Two things:
*]These things which Paul makes mention of (“foreknowledge, predestination, calling, justification, glorification”) are the continuing and unfolding process of salvation.
*]It is TOTALLY a work of God. We can’t “foreknow”, and we can’t “predestinate”, and we can’t “call” and we can’t "justify, and we can’t “glorify”. Everyone of those works is a function of God.
That is why Paul could say,
“For by grace are you saved through faith, and that not of yourselves, it is a gift of God, not of works, lest any man should boast.”And I never ever said anything contrary to these points. I totally agree.
I don’t need to come back to answer your conclusions, because they do not address the Bible. If you want to entertain unbiblical notions, I will not be dragged into such discussions. They are fruitless.My issue with you has always been about your understanding of predestination and your logic. You have always come back with Bible verses but have never once come up with an argument that addressed the logic of my conclusions.
And I won’t challenge it. As I said, I will not entertain notions which try to belittle who God is. I have not painted any picture of God. Contrary to your assertions, I am simply putting on display the picture of who the Bible says God is. You don’t like it because it doesn’t measure up to what you expect and want out of God. You are literally throwing God’s Word into the fire, just like King Jehudi.When I said that your description of god painted a psychopath for a god you have never challenged that conclusion.
The Bible presents no other picture.You know why I think that is? It is because based on your statements, you cannot arrive at any other conclusion.
And that is EXACTLY your problem. You don’t like how God presents Himself as the supreme Judge of the universe, and so you belittle and reject all those verses which talk of Him doing His job as that Judge, and you emphasize solely His love and His mercy. You have a lop-sided and warped view of God.You need to start looking at God from the point of His love.
From your perspective, I suppose that might be true. If I were to view God ONLY AS A GOD OF LOVE, I would not understand why God has to judge the world and sentence those evil doers to eternity in hell. The Bible says that HE CASTS THEM THERE. People may choose their course in this life, but it is God who puts them in hell.You put way TOO MUCH emphasis on his justice, wrath etc and you forget that God is love.
**I believe this is the “can the bushman be saved”? Romans 1:18-24 gives an answer to this. People can be saved based on what God has revealed to them.God has not chosen to reach anyone outside of the Gospel. The Bible is clear on this matter.
God created all things, including all men. God predestined some to salvation.Original Post by Seeking12: "Did God create all things including all men? Did God predestine some to salvation?
The only persons predestined to heaven are those persons who God foreknew were going to be saved at the end of their lives. God saw every action and event of their lives including their deaths before He created the world. Those whom He foresaw by His foreknowledge who “feared Him and worked righteousness” and “endured to the end” of their lives doing these things; these alone did He predestine to heaven. Predestine is only used in a positive sense in Scripture.by Seeking12"Can the predestined to heaven refuse God’s predestination?
The “predestined to heaven” want to be there whole-heartedly and they prove their faith by “fearing God and working righteousness” while they are actually alive on earth. However, God foresaw them doing these things before He created them and this is why He predestined them to heaven in the first place. He judged all of us impartially according to our own free will choices before we were even born. He knows if we are saved already because He knows all things (He is omniscient), but we will not know with absolute assurance if we are saved until we die because we do not know our future actions.by Seeking12 “Can the predestined to heaven refuse God’s predestination?”
God cannot “predestine” anyone to hell. People are “condemned” to hell because God judged them according to their “own” works.by Seeking12If God created all men and destined some to heaven and the predestined to heaven cannot refuse His will; then did God, by default, predestined the rest to hell?
It is clear from the context that the “us” is limited. I don’t limit the “us”, God limits it by specifying who this letter is being written to. We can gather a multitude of clues in this chapter alone.
and only it applies not to those whom to the letter was written…we weren’t present so the contents aren’t written to us or of us only to those who the letter was intended for.
**Thanks for taking your valuable time to address the questions; very thoughtful.God created all things, including all men. God predestined some to salvation.
The only persons predestined to heaven are those persons who God foreknew were going to be saved at the end of their lives. God saw every action and event of their lives including their deaths before He created the world.
Those who support the lie of men about predestinaiton answer this…One is predestined to heaven but is not told about Jesus,how can they enter heaven?Why bother even telling people about Jesus,if they are going to heaven there isn’t anything one can do to change that…even sharing the truth with them…
**Come to Jesus friend. Ask Him into your heart and pray He will save you, repent of your sins before God, then follow Christ; treating Christ as Lord over your life and you will be saved!GOD JUDGES ALL WITH JUSTICE AND NOT UNFAIRLY…in this picture being presented there would be no need for JUSTICE if a man was made to be a vessel for ordinary purposes unto his destruction why judge?He has before hand made decsion to make this man for destruction.
I want to live without sin yet bc of the way i am i can not,i want to be a shining beacon for God but bc of my human nature i can not.So according to the predestinational view i should not desire these things but wallow in sin bc accordingly i am one of those who is not predestined to heaven…it is this very lie told by men that allowed myself to wallow in sin bc since i wasn’t a vessel of honor i wasn’t meant for heaven,so why bother…
Why bother even telling people about Jesus,if they are going to heaven there isn’t anything one can do to change that…even sharing the truth with them…
To late He has already came to me yesterday.**Come to Jesus friend. Ask Him into your heart and pray He will save you, repent of your sins before God, then follow Christ; treating Christ as Lord over your life and you will be saved!
We do not know who the “elect” are do we? Did God command us to share the gospel? Does God use human instruments to aid in reaching the lost?**