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For He chose us in Him before the foundation of the world to be holy and blameless in His presence. In love…
Ephesians 1: 4
And we know that God works all things together for the good of those who love Him, who are called according to His purpose. For those God foreknew, He also predestined to be conformed to the image of His Son, so that He would be the firstborn among many brothers. And those He predestined, He also called; those He called, He also justified; those He justified, He also glorified.
Romans 8: 28-30
I have seen the burden that God has laid upon the sons of men to occupy them. He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set eternity in the hearts of men
Ecclesiastes 3:11
So in essence, although I acknowledge that the perfected work of salvation is the result of the gift & direct grace of God towards us, in that we cannot achieve salvation on our own, I maintain that in order to inherit salvation there must be something of ourselves in the 'transaction', as in, we ourselves as free beings must in some way move towards God through our own efforts, before the work of salvation can proceed within us by Providence, showing up in the interior & exterior circumstances of our lives through the faith which our contact with God produces in us.
So surrender the hunger to say you must know
Have the courage to say I believe
originally posted by: glend
"our own free will has something do do with the salvation"
I would argue it has everything to do with salvation. If we desire to taste the apple. Those desires will restrict our conciousness to the material realm. If we no longer lust for sensational desires. Our conciousness, God willing, will open to the spiritual realm. That is how I comprehend the parable of the pearls. We can either believe in our own minds desires or believe in Christ conciousness. But we cannot eat cake and have it too.
We have to sell all we have (aka clense ALL our egotistical desires) before the devine will (pearl of great price) can enter our conciousness.
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Does not the apostle Paul speak of Christians as being “predestinated”?
Rom. 8:28, 29: “We know that God makes all his works cooperate together for the good of those who love God, those who are the ones called according to his purpose; because those whom he gave his first recognition he also foreordained [“predestinated,” KJ] to be patterned after the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brothers.” (Also Eph. 1:5, 11) Yet, to these same ones, 2 Peter 1:10 says: “Do your utmost to make the calling and choosing of you sure for yourselves; for if you keep on doing these things you will by no means ever fail.” (If the individuals were predestinated to salvation, they could not possibly fail, regardless of what they did. Since effort is required on the part of the individuals, it must be the class that is foreordained. God purposed that the entire class would conform to the pattern set by Jesus Christ. Those selected by God to be part of that class, however, must prove faithful if they are actually to attain the reward set before them.)
Eph. 1:4, 5: “He chose us in union with him [Jesus Christ] before the founding of the world, that we should be holy and without blemish before him in love. For he foreordained us to the adoption through Jesus Christ as sons to himself, according to the good pleasure of his will.” (It is noteworthy that, at Luke 11:50, 51, Jesus parallels “the founding of the world” with the time of Abel. Abel is the first human who continued to have God’s favor throughout his life. Thus, it was after the rebellion in Eden but before the conception of Abel that God formed his purpose to produce a “seed” through which deliverance would be provided. [Gen. 3:15] God purposed that associated with the principal Seed, Jesus Christ, would be a group of his faithful followers who would share with him in a new government over the earth, the Messianic Kingdom.)
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PREDESTINED AS A CLASS
“Those God foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the likeness of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brothers. And those he predestined, he also called; those he called, he also justified; those he justified, he also glorified.” (Romans 8:29, 30, New International Version) How should we understand the term “predestined” used by Paul in these verses?
Paul’s reasoning here is not a peremptory argument in favor of individual predestination. Earlier in our century, the Dictionnaire de théologie catholique explained Paul’s arguments (Romans, chapters 9-11) this way: “Increasingly, the prevailing opinion among Catholic scholars is that the actual concept of a predestination to eternal life has not been set out.” The same reference work then quotes M. Lagrange as saying: “The question primarily developed by Paul is not at all one of predestination and reprobation but merely that of the call of the Gentiles to the grace of Christianity, its antithesis being the incredulity of the Jews. . . . It concerns groups, Gentiles, Jews, and not specific individuals directly.”—Italics ours. [whereislogic: the bolding is mine, cause this is the crucial point as already mentioned on the previous webpage I was quoting from]
More recently, The Jerusalem Bible offered the same conclusion concerning these chapters (Ro 9-11), stating: “The subject of these chapters, therefore, is not the problem of individual predestination to glory, or even to faith, but of Israel’s part in the development of salvation history, the only problem raised by the statements in the O[ld] T[estament].”
The last verses of Romans chapter 8 belong to the same context. Thus, these verses can justly remind us that God foresaw the existence of a class, or group, from among mankind that would be called to reign with Christ, as well as the requirements they would have to meet—and this without designating ahead of time the specific individuals who would be chosen, for that would be contrary to his love and justice.
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scriptures misapplied to support:
Genesis 25:23: rs 142-143
Deuteronomy 31:16-18: it-1 855
Ecclesiastes 3:2: ijwbq article 80; wp17.1 14; w09 4/1 26; w91 10/15 5-6; rs 138
John 6:64: it-1 858; rs 143
Acts 1:16-20: it-1 857-858
Romans 8:28-30: w95 2/15 3, 7; rs 143-144
Romans 9:10-13: it-1 852, 856
Ephesians 1:4, 5: it-1 852, 859; rs 144
2 Thessalonians 2:13, 14: it-1 859
1 Peter 1:1, 2: it-1 859
1 Peter 1:19, 20: it-1 858-859; w06 6/1 23-24
Revelation 17:8: it-2 468
Many people believe that their life and future are predestined by a higher power. They feel that from conception to death, we all follow a script already written in the mind of God. ‘After all,’ they say, ‘God is all-powerful and all-knowing, or omniscient, so surely he must know every detail about the past, the present, and the future.’
WHAT do you think? Does God foreordain our life course and ultimate destiny? In other words, is free will genuine or just an illusion? What does the Bible say?
Total or Selective Foreknowledge?
The Bible leaves us in no doubt as to God’s having foreknowledge. He knows “from the beginning the finale,” says Isaiah 46:10. He even used human secretaries to record many prophecies. (2 Peter 1:21) What is more, those prophecies always come true because God has both the wisdom and the power to fulfill them in every detail. Hence, God can not only foreknow but also foreordain events whenever he chooses to do so. However, does God foreordain the destiny of every human or even the total number who will gain salvation? Not according to the Bible.
The Bible teaches that God is selective when it comes to foreordaining the future. For example, God foretold that “a great crowd” of righteous humans would survive the destruction of the wicked at the end of the present system of things. (Revelation 7:9, 14) Note, though, that God did not give a specific number for that great crowd. The reason? He does not predestinate individuals. God is like the loving father of a large family. He knows that at least some of His children will reciprocate His love, but He does not predetermine the number. [whereislogic: the bolded part takes us back to why my previous comment explains that the texts pointed to in the OP, Rom 8:28-30 and Eph 1:4,5, do not support individual predestination, but concerns a class, or group; therefore they do not conflict with the free will of individuals.]
Compare God’s use of foreordination with the way he uses his power. As the Almighty, God has absolute power. (Psalm 91:1; Isaiah 40:26, 28) But does he use his power in an uncontrolled manner? No. For instance, he held back from acting against Babylon, an enemy of ancient Israel, until the time was right. “I kept exercising self-control,” God said. (Isaiah 42:14) The same principle applies to his use of foreknowledge and foreordination. Jehovah exercises self-control in order to respect the free will that he gave us.
God’s control of his powers does not limit him or render him imperfect. In fact, it magnifies his greatness, and it endears him to us, for it shows that his sovereignty truly is exercised not only with omniscience and power but also with love and respect for the free will of his intelligent creation.
On the other hand, if God predetermines everything, including every nasty accident and vile deed that has ever happened, could we not rightly blame him for all the misery and suffering in the world? Thus, upon closer inspection, the teaching of predestination does not honor God, but casts a pall over him. It paints him as cruel, unjust, and unloving—the very opposite of what the Bible says about him.—Deuteronomy 32:4.
The Choice Is Yours
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