Glad you agree. Since God is omniscient, it's no problem at all for Him.
Claiming "God is omniscient" doesn't actually explain away your inconsistency. It just masks it with an idea. Yes, we believe God knows all things innately. But He cannot
innately know something that originates within us, otherwise it first originated in Him first (hence
innate). If it is a free choice and a self-determined action completely free of God's purpose or intention without any outside determining factors or limitations, then necessarily, God cannot know it lest we choose it. Which is why it is nonsensical to propose it.
The problem is in the false notion that God chooses who will believe, which Calvinists call the "elect", and those for whom Christ didn't die the non-elect, who will never have faith, or salvation.
That's not a problem... it is the truth.
So, can you explain WHY Jesus said what He did to those who refused to come to Him (sure sounds like a non elect)?
You disregarded my explanation last time, so apparently you want to hear it again. There is good reason to believe that Jesus did not know who the non-elect are, just as we are unaware. It is also possible that the full revelation of His purpose in death was not made known to Him yet, which is why He spoke to the sons of Israel as if they still might have accepted Him as their king. Jesus' plea to them is also not a reflection of the divine decree from all eternity, that it was possible for them to believe or not believe and have a unforeseen affect on the entirety of history. Instead, it was a simple statement of purpose: I say this to you so that you might be saved.
OH, OK. So you don't believe that God is omniscient then. Wow.
Thanks for trying to accurately represent me. Really appreciate that.
Your view doesn't make sense, because it takes away from any purpose God had in electing us
before the foundation of the world. Why do it before the foundation of the world? Why even mention that if you are Paul? Might it point to the fact that it happened before we were ever born, before we ever existed, before we could make any choices, before we could ever do right or wrong, etc.?
No, it's not. Eph 1:4 isn't about choosing people for salvation. It's about choosing believers (the "us") to be holy and blameless.
Again, God didn't choose "believers" i.e. people who already believe. By your own admission,
we weren't believers when He chose us.... because we didn't exist yet. See here:
1. Does the election of certain individuals take place before the foundation of the world?
2. Before the foundation of the world, had you or I believed in anything yet?
So then by your own admission, God doesn't elect believers, he elects those
who will later believe. Meaning that at least for some portion of their life, they are elect although unbelievers.
Why do you think that God can't make a choice in eternity past to save all who believe, all the while knowing who will or won't believe? Why is that such a difficult thing for God to do, since it appears that you don't believe that He can do such a thing?
It's not a matter of
difficult, it's a matter of
possibility. There is nothing for Him to know if the choice hasn't been made yet in time. It has no ontological substance or existence for God to know it if it does not first originate within Him, which is partly the reason why we believe in the eternal Divine Decree. Otherwise nothing exists for Him to know.
I haven't maintained that at all. That's a Calvinist claim, based on a misunderstanding of Eph 1:4.
Huh? You said earlier that individuals are elected before the foundation of the world HERE:
1. Does the election of certain individuals take place before the foundation of the world?
Whether they are believers or not, it does not matter. What matters is that you see election as taking place in eternity past. If it takes place in eternity past, then there can be no election after the fact. Therefore the non-elect can be nothing but the non-elect, since they are non-elect from the foundation of the world.
In eternity past, God chose for all believers (unconditionally) to be holy and blameless. That's what believers have been called to and elected for.
Okay well the text doesn't say that, that is an interpolation. God chose us
before the foundation of the world.
What purpose does before the foundation of the world have if he is going to base it on what we do in the world? It destroys the whole meaning of the phrase.
You're still deflecting on the OP. WHY did Jesus say what He did to the non elect, if there is no possibility (in your view) that they "may be saved".
Again, how do you know they were non-elect? There is nothing telling us they were ALL non-elect, in fact to ask that very question is SO speculative that it just has no credibility whatsoever! It is a completely nonsensical question led by an assault on Calvinism at all costs. Proof for the reader:
Thus far, not one Calvinist has addressed that question.
It is becoming apparent that they can't.
It seems you don't care what the text actually says, you just care to disprove us at any and all costs no matter how far off point or out of context you actually are.