The question of predestination remains one of the most serious stumbling blocks for me in regards to the coherence of Christianity. To say that faith is open to all while maintaining that faith is given only to some creates a serious contradiction in my view. It is a contradiction because if faith is a grace given to those whom God elects then the non-elect are faithless by necessity rather than choice. And to punish people for what they could not have otherwise been does not seem just to me.
God has the power to elect everyone. If God so chose he could guarantee the salvific faith of every human being but instead chooses to do so only for a select few leaving all others to their inevitable damnation. Some say God does this so as to maximize his glory. The elect showcase his mercy while the reprobate showcase his justice. This makes sense to a degree but it commits us to the view that God created the world and all sentient beings simply to make a point of his glory. Which for some reason cannot be fully appreciated unless some are punished eternally. This comes across to me as almost Lovecraftian in implication. The universe as ruled by an omnipotent deity who for his own edification requires the eternal torment of some of the very beings he himself created and claims to love. Are we to believe such is the true face of God?
If Christianity is true then I don't see how we can say God is just (yet alone loving) unless everyone has a genuine shot at salvation. The Catholic Church for instance insists that no one is predestined to Hell. But this insistence is sophistry if only some are predestined to Heaven. I have used an example of two drowning children before. To save one and not the other, that is to not intervene and permit the other to drown, is as active a choice as to save one and hold down the other underwater until they have drowned. I don't see a meaningful moral difference between the two.
Romans 8:29 says...
For whom He foreknew, He also predestined
to be conformed to the image of His Son...
I think the meaning of predestination has been redefined by Calvinism to an idea and doctrine which is contradictory to the intention of the Bible. I don’t see anywhere that the scriptures say God pre-determined or predestined who would believe the gospel or be saved. Numerous times the scriptures say that whosoever believes will be saved and receive eternal life. Then it says in Romans that those God foreknew would be predestined to be “ conformed to the image of His Son”. What did God foreknow? Certainly those who would believe the gospel. So I believe it’s biblically accurate to say predestination is not in reference to salvation, rather the blessing God determined to bestow upon those who believe in Jesus Christ as their Savior.
“It’s something that God marked out beforehand as a blessing for certain people; those that He knew would respond to the gospel. So Romans 8, “Whom he foreknew he predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son...." So the ones that He knew, He marked out beforehand a blessing, "elect according to the foreknowledge..."
Tom: Well that’s the next one: "Election."
Dave: Well, I believe it’s the same thing, election and predestination. "Elect according to the foreknowledge of God..." that we should be holy and without blame before Him in love. Or in Ephesians 1, we are chosen in Him before the foundation of the world, again, that we should be holy and without blame before Him as he has predestined us. We are elected to become the sons of God. See, God could save us without making us His children. He could deliver us from His judgment without blessing us to be joint heirs with Christ, so the things that - the blessings that God marked out beforehand, that is what He predestinated us to, or chose us to.
Now the word "chosen" is used in a number of different ways.For example, it doesn't always mean...in fact, as far as I know, it doesn’t mean, ever, "chosen to
salvation." You are chosen to a particular work, to a ministry, and it doesn’t necessarily mean you are saved. For example, we just went through John 6 a few weeks ago, and Jesus says, “Have not I chosen you twelve, and one of you is a devil?”
Is Foreknowledge the Same as Predestination?
Have you read this book?
What Love is This?