Originally posted by natewood3
GIT,
All things work together for good for those that love God AND are called according to HIS purpose. God is working all things together for THEM people. How do we know this? Because of the next verses.
The question is WHY do all things work together for good? Because God has predestined every circumstance to be good to us? More likely is that God uses every circumstance to bring about good things for us. Suffering brings about good character and perseverance. Good times bring about strong faith and praises for God. And in the end, all things work for our sanctification through Jesus as he works in us to produce good works. Saying that this is about circumstances is a stretch that leaves conflict with many other places in scripture.
These verses are the sequence in which they became believers. These verses are the ground and reason we know that God is working all things together for good.
They are the set of events that happens to those who believe, yes. God calls all of us, it is up to us to respond to the calling though. Once we do, God predestines us to be like his Son, he justifies us and then glorifies us through the Son.
Where in the world do you get that these verses are God's "intended course of action" to those who accept the Gospel??? Where is there anything of "accepting the Gospel," or even "faith" for that matter? Faith is the product of the "calling." Notice "calling" leads to justification, which is only by faith. That justification always leads to glorification. There are no drop outs.
Romans 10
9That if
you confess with your mouth, "Jesus is Lord," and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.
Faith is not the product of anything, it’s about trust and repentance, something we can all do. We all have faith in something but most have it in the wrong thing. Only faith in Jesus will save. The order of events are not causatively linked together. It is just stating what has occurred to all believers. All are called by God to be holy, all are predestined to be like the Son, all are justified and all will be glorified. Anything beyond that is reading into the text.
The word "predestined" could also be translated as a "predesigned plan." God has a plan for all believers: they will be conformed to the image of His Son. God foreknew us, that is, He loved us intimately. He did not love all people intimately. He loved all the world with an impersonal love, but this foreloving is more than that.
Nowhere does it say he loved us
specifically. it says that Christ foreknew the
group of believers as a whole, but nowhere does it say he knew who was in that group individually.
Once again, I see ABSOLUTELY NOTHING about OUR action in Ephesians 1. It is ALL God's work, not ours. There is absolutely nothing about our "accepting Christ."
God predestined "us." "Us" must refer to a non-entity I suppose. That is comforting to know....
Where did I suggest that any of those actions were our own? I agree that in that passage Paul is describing God’s actions in relation to us. But this does not mean that everything in all of existence or that everything in regards to our salvation is only God’s work. That’s reading into the text as well.
You seem to be agreeing that when God draws and convicts, it can cause us to desire Him? You say that "once we agree to God's terms, then God enables us to good works for him," but what makes you think that it isn't God that enables us to repent or to desire Him?
Why would God say “repent and live� if he was the one did it?
I have already said this, but we are not "programmed" by God to do whatever He wants us to do. We much of the time do what WE want to do, but "even the wrath of man shall praise Him."
Pro 16:1 The plans of the heart belong to man, but the answer of the tongue is from the LORD.
Pro 16:9 The heart of man plans his way, but the LORD establishes his steps.
Pro 21:1 The king's heart is a stream of water in the hand of the LORD; he turns it wherever he will.
Does God say since He is the One establishing steps, we are not longer free and we no longer plan our own ways?
If someone picks me up and holds me and controls my every action, my every footstep, my every motion, in what way AM I free?
Deu 29:29 "The secret things belong to the LORD our God, but the things that are revealed belong to us and to our children forever, that we may do all the words of this law.
Rom 11:34 "For who has known the mind of the Lord, or who has been his counselor?"
Rom 11:35 "Or who has given a gift to him that he might be repaid?"
Rom 11:36 For from him and through him and to him are all things. To him be glory forever. Amen.
You act as though you can actually KNOW what God ordained, and then say, "No, I don't think I want to do that Lord." Most of what God ordains is that we freely carry out His plans according to our intentions and purposes, which are really His purposes. We simply act in accordance with what we want to do. We are never coerced or forced by God to do anything.
If God has ordained everything, then everything is also forced for there is no way we can alter what has been ordained. We may not be conscious of this but it still is required logically.
God knows all possibilities, and it is possible for you to have done something other than you decided to do, but God already knew what you would do and ordained that it would be so.
If God already knew what I would do and ordained it to be so then there is no way I could ever have possibly done otherwise. If God ordained A then it’s not possible for me to do ~A. so it’s not possible for me to “have done something other than you decided to do� because what I “decided to do� is what God ordained me to do. I never was free, if that’s the case.
Will you do me a favor? Give me a quote from a Calvinist that teaches that we are robots programmed by God.
If you insist:
“Nothing is more absurd than to think anything at all is done but by the ordination of God….
Every action and motion of every creature is so governed by the hidden counsel of God, that nothing can come to pass, but what was ordained by Him….The
wills of men are so governed by the will of God, that they are carried on straight to the mark which He has fore-ordained� (Cal. Inst., book 1, chapter 16, sect. 3).
Sure sounds like robots to me. What else could “the wills of men are so governed by the will of God� mean?
If God foreknows what you will do, it is because that is what you will do and would have done in that situation. If God foreknew I would choose to buy a white car over a neon pink car, did that make me buy the white car, even though I could have bought the neon pink car? NO! God foreknew it because He knew I would act in accordance with my desires and preferences. I never act contrary to my preferences and desires, unless I am forced to do so by something external, such as my boss or professor makes me do so.
Who says we have to act in accordance with our desires and preferences? I’ve certainly acted “out of character� before. Haven’t you?
Did Peter and Judas make real decisions and were they accountable?
Yep, most definitely.
You are creating a false dilemma. We are truly free and we only do what we want, which God already foreknows. Foreknowledge and free will are NOT incompatible.
LOL oh yes they are. If God knows that in one hour I will watch a tv show then in 1 hour I will watch a tv show. I am not free to play on my computer or go for a walk or hang out with friends or anything like that. I HAVE to watch tv in one hour. Now remember, I have not yet decided what I’m going to do in one hour. But if God foreknows it, then I have no choice but to “choose� to watch tv in one hour.
Here is a formal logic proof that also explains the problems of Gods’ foreknowledge (exhaustive at least) with free will.
Argument for a partially open future-attempt 3
1. I have free will
2. We define free will as the ability to choose equally between two or more options when presented with a choice.
3. For any decision I make to be free, each choice must be contingent.
4. A contingent choice is one where each choice has an equal possibility of being chosen.
5. Let us assume now that we have a choice before us and that God has absolute foreknowledge of what choice I will pick before I pick it.
6. Since his knowledge is absolute, there is no way he can be mistaken about it. In other words, what he knows is absolutely certain.
7. Whatever is absolutely certain cannot be changed. If it could be, it wouldn’t be absolutely certain.
8. Thus, the choice God knows I will make, because it’s absolutely certain, cannot be changed. Whatever choice God knows I will make cannot be changed.
9. Now let us say that I have a decision before me between choice “a� and choice “b�.
10. Let us also say that God has absolute foreknowledge that I will choose choice “a�
11. Thus, from number 6 it follows that my choosing of choice “a� is absolutely certain.
12. It also follows then from number 7 that my decision of choice “a� cannot be changed.
13. It follows that if God knows I will choose “a� then he also knows I will not choose “b�.
14. This knowledge is also absolutely certain and cannot be changed per numbers 6 and 7.
15. Thus, since God is certain that choice “b� will not be chosen by me then choice “b� is not an option I can choose. If I could choose it then God’s knowledge would not be absolutely certain.
16. Since “b� is no longer a choice I can choose then there is not an equal possibility of both “a� or “b� being chosen and the decision is no longer contingent.
17. Since any decision that is not contingent is also not free, per number 3, then this decision is not a free one.
18. Thus, for this decision I do not have a true free will because there is only one choice I can make and that is the one God has absolute foreknowledge of.
19. If God has exhaustive foreknowledge of the future then every decision we make follows the exact same pattern as described here-not contingent and thus not free.
20. Thus, if God has exhaustive foreknowledge of the future, then we do not have free will.
Rom 8:20 For the creation was subjected to futility, not willingly, but because of him who subjected it, in hope
Rom 8:21 that the creation itself will be set free from its bondage to decay and obtain the freedom of the glory of the children of God.
1Jo 3:2 Beloved, we are God's children now, and what we will be has not yet appeared; but we know that when he appears we shall be like him, because we shall see him as he is.
Heb 12:22 But you have come to Mount Zion and to the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and to innumerable angels in festal gathering,
Heb 12:23 and to the assembly of the firstborn who are enrolled in heaven, and to God, the judge of all, and to the spirits of the righteous made perfect,
Rev 21:4 He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning nor crying nor pain anymore, for the former things have passed away."
Rev 21:5 And he who was seated on the throne said, "Behold, I am making all things new."
Rev 21:26 They will bring into it the glory and the honor of the nations.
Rev 21:27 But nothing unclean will ever enter it, nor anyone who does what is detestable or false, but only those who are written in the Lamb's book of life.
Rev 22:3 No longer will there be anything accursed, but the throne of God and of the Lamb will be in it, and his servants will worship him.
I don’t see any indication here that says we will lack the ability to sin. I agree with you that we won’t sin, but I’m not sure we’ll lack the capacity and ability.
I feel you have not thoroughly read Calvinists on the doctrine of providence and divine decrees...if you have read them, you have not undestood it.
I admit that I could be wrong about some things. If I am, please show me where and correct me.
I meant, and it was my fault for not specifying, does God ever coerce or force individuals to carry out an action? Does God ever have to coerce to make sure His overall plan is not thwarted? Could or can God ever coerce or force a course of action to take place?
In my opinion, no. could he? Yes, but I don’t think he does.
God bless!
GIT