- Oct 21, 2003
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So today I listened to the late Dr. S. Lewis Johnson again, from his series of systematic theology lectures pertaining to Soteriology. More specifically one of the six part "For Whom Did Christ Die" lectures.
He brought up an issue I had long forgotten, an objection to the Arminian notion of Predestination amounting to God looking into the future beforehand, and basing His election on the foreseen faith of people whom accepted the atonement of Christ for their sins. Please allow me to attempt to unpack the line of thought, and try to be fair to those whom disagree at the same time.
But before I do that, let me preface by saying that I know ALL Christians believe our sovereign God is all-knowing, that God is omniscient (with the exception of the small minority of modern "Open Theists"). I joyfully acknowledge that NO traditional Arminian denies the omniscience of God. We agree on the attributes of our Triune God. With that said, I will move on to next part.
I seriously doubt most Christians of the Arminian variety have given the following much thought, and I must say, when I heard it, I was like "whoa". The logic of the argument is tight, and S. Lewis Johnson explains the issue far better than I can, nevertheless I will try.
So here is the issue, let's assume the commonly believed notion of "foreseen faith" for the sake of the argument. If God had to look into the future to foresee faith by (which is a common Arminians explaination of predestination), then God did not know those "freewill" choices to accept Christ, rather He looked into the future and "learned" who would choose Christ and based His choice on foreknowledge, but it cannot logically be said that God is all-knowing or omniscient certainly in the classical sense of Arminianism, if election is based on foreknowledge of "freewill" choices. This strikes me as a very serious problem for the non-Calvinist, but perhaps the non-Calvinists here can unravel this.
He brought up an issue I had long forgotten, an objection to the Arminian notion of Predestination amounting to God looking into the future beforehand, and basing His election on the foreseen faith of people whom accepted the atonement of Christ for their sins. Please allow me to attempt to unpack the line of thought, and try to be fair to those whom disagree at the same time.
But before I do that, let me preface by saying that I know ALL Christians believe our sovereign God is all-knowing, that God is omniscient (with the exception of the small minority of modern "Open Theists"). I joyfully acknowledge that NO traditional Arminian denies the omniscience of God. We agree on the attributes of our Triune God. With that said, I will move on to next part.
I seriously doubt most Christians of the Arminian variety have given the following much thought, and I must say, when I heard it, I was like "whoa". The logic of the argument is tight, and S. Lewis Johnson explains the issue far better than I can, nevertheless I will try.
So here is the issue, let's assume the commonly believed notion of "foreseen faith" for the sake of the argument. If God had to look into the future to foresee faith by (which is a common Arminians explaination of predestination), then God did not know those "freewill" choices to accept Christ, rather He looked into the future and "learned" who would choose Christ and based His choice on foreknowledge, but it cannot logically be said that God is all-knowing or omniscient certainly in the classical sense of Arminianism, if election is based on foreknowledge of "freewill" choices. This strikes me as a very serious problem for the non-Calvinist, but perhaps the non-Calvinists here can unravel this.