BrotherSteve said:
I recently heard a preacher use Romans 8:29-30 to show that people are predestined to go to heaven and that those people will also be conformed to the image of Christ. The way it was used was to say that all Christians where predestined.
God is a sovereign God and from Him flows all that comes to pass. Romans 8:28-30 does not simply relay that "all
Christians were predestined." By virtue of necessary exclusion, it also relays that whomsoever God did
not predestine are effectually left to incur His righteous and deserved wrath.
I believe that God has chosen some people to be predestined and those people he has also called and will conform those people to the image of His Son. A good example would be Saul of Tarsus. I believe God had a plan for Saul before Saul knew what it was and that God worked in his life to conform Saul into what we all know as Paul.
But I dont believe that God has predestined all Christians to go to heaven;
The idea that God has effectually determined
certain parts of His eternal plan is incongruous with the biblical account as it introduces ideas that must be dealt with because such an idea runs contrary to His sovereign nature. For example, if we say that God
only predestined certain pivitol people to be saved then that requires that we either acknowledge that God is ambivilant regarding everyone else's salvation, or, that God is incapable of assuring that they be saved. Neither is in keeping with the nature of the God that is revealed in Holy Scripture. Additionally, to say that God predestined all that shall come to pass regarding Saul, or any other individual, requires that we also acknowledge that God is sovereignly governing every other thing that Saul would encounter. Of course He
does do this, but it blows a large hole in the theory that God is only sovereign in His dealings with certain parts of His creation. In short, if God predestined that you be saved, how could He assure that the things you encounter would not lead to your eternal death if He was not also sovereignly governing them? Logically, the two are inseparable.
that would mean that God also predestined people who are not Christians to go to hell.
To this I offer the irreplaceable words of Scripture:
Proverbs 16:4
The Lord has made all for Himself,
Yes,
even the wicked for the day of doom.
Romans 9:21-24
Does not the potter have power over the clay, from the same lump to make one vessel for honor and another for dishonor? What if God, wanting to show His wrath and to make His power known, endured with much longsuffering
the vessels of wrath prepared for destruction, and that He might make known the riches of His glory on the vessels of mercy, which He had prepared beforehand for glory, even us whom He called, not of the Jews only, but also of the Gentiles?
Scripture is abundantly clear on this issue. Some, for their own selfish reasons, choose to simply ignore that God is providential in all matters, even the reprobation of those He has left to their sins.
Many verses talk about how God loved the whole world (that means every one of us), why would God predestine someone he loved to go to hell?
God does not predestine His loved ones to hell. On the contrary,
all whom God loves are predestined, called, justified, and glorified. Those passages you speak of do not indicate that the salvitic love of God is extended to all without exception. We should not think so lightly of the love of God as to imply that it is given to someone and does not result in their eternal salvation.
The idea of Predestination also makes evangelism seem pointless why tell anyone about God if he has already chosen the people he wants to go to heaven? That goes against all the verses that tell us to go into the entire world and tell people the gospel.
Again, you speak contrary to logic. It is the very predestination of God that makes evangelistic work reliable, for such works do not depend on our feeble methods but, rather, upon the appointment of God. We go in to the world and preach with power
knowing that God will gather His elect through the dispensation of His Word. All who think that predestination makes evangelism moot fail to understand that it is God's sovereign ordination that gives us faith that our efforts shall not be in vain. Those who decry the biblical message of the foreordination of God must, in vain, depend upon themselves for the fruit that shall come from their labors.
God bless