Rom 8:28-30 says:
And we know that in all things
God works for the good of those who love him,
since they are the called according to his purpose.
For those God foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brothers and sisters.
And those he predestined, he also called; those he called, he also justified; those he justified, he also glorified.
‘Those being the called according to His purpose’ is a further descriptor of ‘those who love the Lord.’ ‘Being’ is a present participle – an active state, not an event in the past. Called is an adjective in the Greek.
They are the called
according to His purpose because they love the Lord. Rom 9:10-30 shows that this purpose was that righteousness be by faith, not works or ethnicity. Eph 3:1-12 again shows that God’s purpose was for Jew and Gentile alike to approach God through faith. II Tim 1:9-11 shows that the grace and God’s purpose of salvation was there for us since the beginning of time, but only now revealed in history through Christ at the cross and the gospel message. Eph 1:1-14 shows God’s predestined plan before time that those who put their faith in Christ be conformed to the image of the Son and chosen as a holy people to the praise of His glory. Etc.
Those God
foreknew He predestined
to be conformed to the image of the Son – not predestined them to have faith. Those of faith are conformed to the image of the Son (Phil 3:9-11, I Pet 1, etc.) God, then, foreknows those who will receive the gospel and have faith in Christ.
(Again, predestination in the Greek refers to boundaries/limits on something being set up before hand – not a specific action or movement within those boundaries.)
Those who God in His foreknowledge predestined to be conformed to the image of the Son (believers) He also called and justified (not gave faith. Justification is through faith, so also follows it.) Then, God glorifies these people who love Him and who are the called according to His purpose! I Thess 1:10-12
Nothing in this passage says that God called a select few to have faith, as everything on the list (besides foreknowledge) is something that follows faith. A strong case can be made that the reference to foreknowledge is a reference to God knowing who will respond in faith, and having the plan of salvation predestined for those who respond in faith that they might be conformed to the image of the Son, etc.
It is necessary therefore to state that there is a difference between the general call issued to all men and the special or effectual call issued to those predestined to be conformed to the image of God’s Son as seen in the scriptures.
Not really. The Romans passage says the ones who love God are “the called according to His purpose” (vs. those called/invited in general of which few are chosen) – but the passage does not say they are especially called *to* love God or have faith. Since conforming to Christ follows faith, the passage does not demand that God predestine them to have faith. The implication seems strong that God’s foreknowledge is that God knows who will have faith and so predestines those through His plan and purpose before time to be conformed to Christ.
All good systematic theologies have agreed on that doctrine since thorough systematic theologies have been written for the church (based on scripture only)
Commentaries and Bible teachers have not always held the same interpretation of the verses you have given nor has the Calvinist interpretation of Rom 8:28-30. I don’t know whether or not it is a common teaching of Systematic theology books, having only read through a couple – but even if many modern authors took that view it would not prove it.
Calvinists do not teach that God specifically authors every event which happens. They teach that God decides which things He will allow to happen while emphatically saying that His predestination of everything which happens in no way infringes on the wills of men and angels.
Not all Calvinists teach that God specifically authors every event, but it is a common teaching of Calvinists where I live. (The ‘God must push around every molecule of the universe or it will implode’ view.)
However, even the less extreme view that God must ‘allow’ everything to happen seems unsupported by scripture. God can and does defer judgement, yes, and does not always stop something from occurring even though He theoretically could, but that is not the same as allowing everything.
“
color:#001320;background:#FDFEFF">They have built the high places of Baal to burn their children in the fire as offerings to Baal--something I did not command or mention, nor did it enter my mind.” Jer 19:5
The definition of allow is to 'give permission for or legally permit'; 'to grant something to a person as a right'; 'to permit via neglect or oversight'; to 'deliberately set apart time or opportunity for', 'to approve or sanction'. Allow implies granting or conceding a right to do something, or at least the complete absence of intent to hinder something.
It is clear from scripture that God does not legally permit evil (
Psa 45:7), he does not treat evil as a right or necessity (J
ames 1:13,) He does not permit evil via oversight or neglect (
Job 34:21,
Psa 33:12-15,) He does not deliberately make opportunity for evil to occur (
James 1:13-15), and He does not approve or sanction evil (
Jer 7:30-31,
I Pet 3:10-12).
In fact, God -forbids- evil, hates it, does not permit it, punishes it, and asks us all to turn from it; all the exact opposite of allowance. (
I Pet 3:9,
Rom 12:9-17,
Prov 8:13,
Jer 25:5,
Isa 1:16,
Rom 6:15-17,
Psa 26:5,
Prov 24:19-20, etc).
Now, God can set up natural laws, physical limits, etc., limit options, directly intervene to influence someone so that history plays out as He has prophesied, interfere with natural law, etc. But He doesn’t allow sin – He judges it. He doesn’t allow people to disbelieve – those who disbelieve remain condemned precisely because they aren’t obeying the Lord and turning to God in faith.
He predestined everything which occurs in His creation to so occur. Belief in His omniscience demands that we believe that doctrine.
That is a misunderstanding of the Greek word prohorizo, filtering it through English connotations like ‘destiny’ instead of examining what the Greek means.
“
4309 proorízō (from
4253 /pró, "before" and
3724 /horízō, "establish boundaries, limits") – properly,
pre-horizon, pre-determine limits (boundaries) predestine. [
4309 (
proorízō) occurs six times in the NT (eight in the writings of Paul). Since the root (
3724 /horízō) already means "establish boundaries," the added prefix (
pro, "before") makes
4309 (
proorízō) "to
pre-establish boundaries," i.e.
before creation.]”
Strong's Greek: 4309. προορίζω (proorizó) -- to predetermine, foreordain
Predestination is also not the determination of every action or event or thought that occurs in creation. The word itself means to “to mark out beforehand’; to pre-establish limits and boundaries. Specifically, this word references how God set limits/boundaries/laws upon everything before creation. He set the laws of physics, placed the boundaries of the sea, determined the eternal plan by which mankind would be saved, etc (
Prov 8:22-31,
Eph 1:3-10,
Eph 3:10-11,
Job 38:33,
Rom 8:29, etc).
In the plan of salvation, God also predestined it to include the Gentiles, not just the Jews (
Eph 3:2-6,
Rom 3:21-31,
Rom 9:1-26,
Rom 15:5-13, J
ohn 1:11-13,
Isa 45:9-10,
Rom 9:11-16, etc).
God limits and bounds what can happen under the sun, such as the boundaries of nations or the natural laws of physics, and His purpose has been predestined before time (that Christ would die to bring salvation to man, etc.) God can especially interfere – such as Jesus calming the sea that had to obey His word – but He doesn’t have to pick out everything that happens in creation simply because He is all powerful and could. His character/purpose are also factors.
God knew from the beginning everything which would happen if He acted in certain ways in the beginning and in innumerable ways ongoing throughout history. There was no chance that, if He acted in those specific ways, what He knew would happen as a result would not happen. Those events were predestined to happen from the split second, as it were, that He decreed that He would so act.He chose to so act in those certain ways out of His wise and unfettered will. In so choosing to act – He was predestining everything which surely would follow those actions, Those things include mundane things which are not directly pertaining to the will of men and they include things which come about because of the choices made out of the wills of men (who are created in His image and able to make meaningful choices). How God could hold men, who have their very being in Him and who’s actions are destined by God to occur, responsible for their choices if He is sovereign in the way the scriptures show Him is admittedly a bit of a mystery. But we can’t just duck that mystery by showing Him to be less the sovereign God than the scriptures clearly tell us He is.
God’s plan Has been set from the beginning, and so He has often influenced history to maintain that plan or accomplish other purposes (Such as judgement on a nation.) God also knows the end from the beginning – every action man will take and could potentially take – it is a large leap from that to believe that every mundane action is pre-determined by God vs. foreknown.
God being sovereign doesn’t mean He has to control every variable, but that He is able to punish disobedience, can command angels and the laws of nature, can supersede the laws of nature, can account for variables in regards to His plan, can delegate tasks and reward the obedient and punish the disobedient, etc.
How are predestination and election connected with foreknowledge?
How does God's sovereignty and mankind's free will work together in salvation?
How are we to understand the sequence and part that man plays in his salvation?
Is God sovereign or do we have a free will?
I don't have the time or, to be more precise, I don't have the inclination to.
Lol – I’m a mom with a toddler and the next due in less than three weeks with a house to get ready, plus most of my time online is spent moderating a different Bible site. I guess I’m the opposite – I have the inclination but not the time. Through posts like this I can see if there are any support verses for a theory I have not yet considered in depth, and determine new topics to study or write about.