I don't disagree with God knowing people. My concern is that you say that God "is not knowing historical events". How on earth can you know what God can or cannot know? As if knowing a person means you don't know anything about them? God foreknew us but didn't know who the believers were? Why limit God and His foreknowledge? When Adam knew his wife did he know she was his wife?bilbofett wrote:Of course God predestines those he foreknew. The word "foreknew/foreknown/foreknowledge" appears roughly only 4 times in the entire NT (it does not appear in the OT). Every single time the word appears, it refers to God foreknowing PEOPLE, personally, not events, ideas, concepts, etc. God in His foreknowledge is knowing His people.
2 times it is the church, 1 time it is Israel, and one time it is Christ. Never in any of the verses is God foreknowing the lost, satan, angels, Judas, etc.
The word "foreknow" in this sense, from the Greek, refers to a personal, loving relationship from God to the person. He is not looking down through a corridor of time at choices they make. He is loving them individually and personally before eternity past. God is not knowing historical events, He is knowing people, like Adam "knew" his wife.
Well, I don't know. It seems pretty simple to me. If God knows all things then He certainly knew who the faithful were going to be. Again, to say God chose me but did not look "down through time" is like saying God didn't know what would happen. It's an assertion.bilbofett wrote:
"You were chosen based on foreknowledge". Exactly. I was chosen based on God knowing me personally before I was born. God did not choose me based on Him looking down through time and seeing that I would "have faith on Wed the 22nd of March". None of the verses where "foreknow" "foreknew" "foreknown" and "foreknowledge" occur even begin to hint or imply that. Remember, foreknowledge and omniscience are not the same thing. The foreknow in these verses is a verb, not a noun. In salvation, God is always the Alpha. He is the source, the initiater. God is proactive, we are reactive. Not the other way around.
What's more logical:
-God know all things, and always did. -or-
-There was a time when God didn't know all things, at this time God foreknew personally those who would be glorified, without knowing what they would do ahead of time.
If you say that's not what you meant, then I'm sorry but you did say "God is not knowing historical events, He is knowing people".
It seems to limit God. A strange thing for a Calvinist to do.
And I submit that this is where Calvinism breaks down, and why I am not one. You have just made the typical Calvinist assertion that is anti-biblical. Faith is not meritorious (Rom 4:2-5). Not only that, faith is contrasted against works! (Rom 4:16, Gal 3:2-3, Eph 2:9) God purifies the heart through faith.bilbofett wrote:
You know the old adage the people try to pass off as an actual verse "God helps those who help themselves"? Most of us have a problem with that philosophy, but I hope we should all still have just as much a problem with the adage "God elects those who elect themselves". It's the same philosophy. Or "elected because I selected". That's salvation by works. That's performing a deed meritorious to gain God's favor and have Him choose you over your neighbor, because your neighbor did not perform the deed pleasing to God. It's also saying that apart from God's work, we are able to please Him, on our own.
So when you say:
In an attempt to (mis)represent Arminianism, you contradict the very word of God.bilbofett wrote: "God did not choose me based on Him looking down through time and seeing that I would "have faith on Wed the 22nd of March"
"elected because I selected" That's salvation by works. That's performing a deed meritorious to gain God's favor and have Him choose you over your neighbor, because your neighbor did not perform the deed pleasing to God."
It's one thing to debate what God "foreknew", it's quite another to attribute opposite meanings to words: calling faith a meritorious work.
I'd like to see a biblical exegetical explanation for your assertions.
About this, I'm not sure what your point is. Are you saying I object to what you said? Maybe I am missing something but you seem to be arguing against something I didn't say.bilbofett wrote:
Getting back to Romans 8-9, everyone who is glorified is also justified and called. This is the golden chain of redemption, unbroken, for all christians. Everyone that is called WILL be justified and glorified. The same group of people that are glorified at the end of the chain are the exact same group who were predestined, called, and justified.
It seems you want to make different categories of christians. Some could be predestined, but not reach glorification? Or... some could be glorified, but were not predestined.
You mentioned in your post that "the predestination is to conformity to Christ's image" Of course it is.
All believers are conformed to Christ's image. That is sanctification, guaranteed for all believers. Some will be more sanctified than others. But all will be glorified (completition of sanctification). There is no further work after glorification; we will all be in heaven. We won't be 'improving' or being further set-apart, since sin will be gone. There won't be a worldliness to be set apart from.
Getting back to the golden chain of redemption in Romans 8:28-30, an opponent of "calvinistic" predestination has to prove that the group being glorified is somehow a different group than the one being predestined or justified. I guess in your specific case you'd also have to show how one can be a christian and not be in the process of being "conformed to Christ's image".
BTW, this type of reasoning from the text is exactly what catholics do to get around justification by faith alone. Their salvation is a man-centered, man-glorifying, and man-controlled system which does not guarantee sanctification or glorification. So they argue that one can be glorified without being justified/predestined, and vice versa. They say there is a break in the chain, but never really manage to prove how or why there is a break. They just assume there is, otherwise they would have to admit that God is in control of salvation, and not them and their good works.
One last thing, are you telling me Paul in Romans 9 is answering some imaginary objector in his audience over the charge of God being unjust and unfair over who gets to be "conformed to Christ's image"? Are you also saying there's 2 classes of believers, those who are in the process of sanctification, and those who aren't?
Please, from chapter 8 and 9, show how the context and topic is "sanctification", and no election unto salvation. (the two aren't mutually exclusive, of course, but one is much wider in scope than the other).
I have no problem with God's perfect foreknowledge. He knows all that will come to glorification, so he predestined these to be conformed to the image of His Son.
Although is Paul's other letters he speaks of those who were converted and received the Spirit yet Paul says (in Galatians) he may have waisted his efforts on them, that if they seek to be justified by law that they have been estranged from Christ and have fallen from Grace (Gal 5:4). You can't be estranged from Christ without being in a relationship first, and you can't fall from Grace if you were not in it.
Gal 5:7 You were running well. Who hindered you from obeying the truth?
Gal 5:8 This persuasion is not from him who calls you.
How can one hinder a Christian from the truth? That persuasion does not come from Him who calls. They were running well. Is Paul not warning genuine believers, called by God that if they seek justification by law that they will be alienated from Christ? How could he say that to those God calls?
The cry of injustice is that of a Jew who thinks his right standing with God comes by law (what he does; Rom 9:32) and by lineage to Abraham, Issac, Jacob, etc (Rom 9:6-7). Paul refutes both of these notions, stating in verses 30-32 that they pursued God by works and not by faith. Paul is not speaking against faith, else he would be hopelessly contradicting himself.bilbofett wrote:
Also, if salvation is up to man's self-exercised faith, then why is there a cry of injustice/unfairness in chapter 9?
Arminians (at least those I have heard) believe faith is a gift from God. However, one can receive a gift and not exercise it. The Apostles exhort Christians to use their gifts. Jesus' own parables show that God will condemn the steward of God who does not use what God has given him (Matt 25:14-30). So I don't understand how faith as a gift could be viewed as irresistible when other gifts are not.bilbofett wrote:
Do arminians who believe that faith is not a gift of God, and that salvation is up to each person to will, also believe that God is unjust/unfair? It doesn't fit.
Also, it's not up to each persons will, as if to say it's apart from God. This is not what Arminians believe. We believe that God acts first, working in man by the Holy Spirit and through the Gospel as well as with signs and wonders.
As far as God being unjust, I don't think He is at all. As a matter of fact, He sent His Son to make atonement for sin. We owe God more than we could ever give. That's why it's of faith, so that it's by Grace we are saved.
No problem.bilbofett wrote:
I've said enough, thanks for listening.
