Bro. James Reed
New Member
BTW, our church amended our Articles of Faith year before last because the wording used in describing our belief on predestination sounded a little too absolute.
The prevalent view here is that God predestinated only man unto eternal glory. That predestination only deals with that aspect, as the word itselfs says. Pre-destinate...destination determined beforehand.
God's foreknowledge has two aspects; passive and active(or determinate, which is also predeterminate since God has already foreseen everything and decided, in His own mind, on what He will or will not act).
God's predeterminate foreknowledge is separate from His passive knowledge of all things and people which will ever occur or exist. The active/predeterminate part is the aspect of God which causes things to occur, rather than passively allowing them to occur. This is separate from predestination, which pertains only to people, yet similar in that God actively causes certain events to take place, just as He actively chose a people to call His own and take home to glory.
I hope this helps explain the distinction on predestination held by most PBs.
The prevalent view here is that God predestinated only man unto eternal glory. That predestination only deals with that aspect, as the word itselfs says. Pre-destinate...destination determined beforehand.
God's foreknowledge has two aspects; passive and active(or determinate, which is also predeterminate since God has already foreseen everything and decided, in His own mind, on what He will or will not act).
God's predeterminate foreknowledge is separate from His passive knowledge of all things and people which will ever occur or exist. The active/predeterminate part is the aspect of God which causes things to occur, rather than passively allowing them to occur. This is separate from predestination, which pertains only to people, yet similar in that God actively causes certain events to take place, just as He actively chose a people to call His own and take home to glory.
I hope this helps explain the distinction on predestination held by most PBs.