Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.
We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!
God does not plan or know the future?
Our salvation is not a work of God?
On the 7th day, God rested from all His works.
John 6:29 Jesus answered and said to them, “This is the work of God, that you believe in Him whom He sent.”
Your distorting the meaning, it is not worthy of discussion by limiting to a few versus a concept which also includes God's works, foreknowledge, predestination, calling, and election of individuals. It's like you have this huge work of writing, and out of it you grab one sentence, and then declare what the book means by what is written in one sentence after you define all the meanings and boundaries. What you end up is a fantasy explanation of the whole work.You did not answer the OP. Is that because there is no such verse?
You did not answer the OP. Is that because there is no such verse?Your distorting the meaning, it is not worthy of discussion by limiting to a few versus a concept which also includes God's works, foreknowledge, predestination, calling, and election of individuals. It's like you have this huge work of writing, and out of it you grab one sentence, and then declare what the book means by what is written in one sentence after you define all the meanings and boundaries. What you end up is a fantasy explanation of the whole work.
The word means this accoding to the dictionary. Apparently you dont agree with dictionaries.You did not answer the OP. Is that because there is no such verse?
Nor did you say how the meaning was distorted, nor did you back it up with verses.
I'm on a Christian board. That means the Holy Bible is our final authority for all issues. I presented the Bible's definition of predestination and you give me the Oxford editors' definition. That is very telling and I'm thankful it happened. Not to win a debate, but for others to see and consider. Moreover, that definition gave you the sense that was historically popularized by Calvinists. It's simply telling you what Calvinists think it means. If the word [or any word] were to take on another connotation in the future, then that would be the connotation you would find in a future dictionary - albeit not necessarily the correct one. A dictionary simply reflects popular culture.The word means this accoding to the dictionary. Apparently you dont agree with dictionaries.
Your writing your own dictionary.
Oxford
pre·des·ti·na·tion
noun
(as a doctrine in Christian theology) the divine foreordaining of all that will happen, especially with regard to the salvation of some and not others. It has been particularly associated with the teachings of St. Augustine of Hippo and of Calvin.
Merriam Webster
Definition of predestination
1: the act of predestinating : the state of being predestinated
2: the doctrine that God in consequence of his foreknowledge of all events infallibly guides those who are destined for salvation
I'm on a Christian board. That means the Holy Bible is our final authority for all issues. I presented the Bible's definition of predestination and you give me the Oxford editors' definition. That is very telling and I'm thankful it happened. Not to win a debate, but others to see and consider. Moreover, that definition gave you the sense that was historically popularized by Calvinists. If the word [or any word] were to take on another connotation in the future, then that would be the connotation you would find in a future dictionary - albeit not necessarily the correct one. A dictionary simply reflects popular culture.
So, yet again, you did not answer the OP, but ran to the words of men rather than the words of God. Is that because there is no such verse?
Yet again, you have yet to show the distortion [especially since my "interpretation" is backed up by scripture] and provide your own scriptural definition.You presented a distorted opinion of what 'predestination' means. So no you established nothing. except your own interpretation.
I have no issue with God foreknowing people individually, so no, there is no such "subterfuge".God foreknows individuals as His people, not the concept of believers as His people. That is the subterfuge playing out against the meaning here.
As it says, For Whom He foreknew, He also predestined.
Its right in your chart, your putting the emphasis on believers as a generalized type person that God saves, not the called individual person.I have no issue with God foreknowing people individually, so no, there is no such "subterfuge".
You still refuse to answer the OP. Is that because there is no such verse?
No problem with that. Make the believer the individual. What was I supposed to write? "Mike" or "Bobby"?Its right in your chart, your putting the emphasis on believers as a generalized type person that God saves, not the called individual person.
As your showing, 'predestination of the believer', which is not 'For whom He foreknew'. It changes the verse meaning entirely.
Do you view adoption and salvation as two different things?View attachment 3425 I ask you all to be as careful with terms as you can be. Our Calvinist brethren often denounce conflation of terms. We are not talking about election here. The thread is about predestination unto salvation. And please define terms with cross-references, not general one-liners.
In the verses listed in the O.P., yes, they are different. Salvation in its basic form, is simply our soul not suffering the judgment of hell. Adoption, as it is used and defined by Paul himself in the verses above, is the transformation of our body at the resurrection to be conformed to the physical image of Christ's resurrection body.Do you view adoption and salvation as two different things?
A men brother there is not even a hint of such nonsense.View attachment 3425 I ask you all to be as careful with terms as you can be. Our Calvinist brethren often denounce conflation of terms. We are not talking about election here. The thread is about predestination unto salvation. And please define terms with cross-references, not general one-liners.
I disagree with your definition. Therefore it seems fruitless to argue when we cannot agree on the meaning of the terms being used.In the verses listed in the O.P., yes, they are different. Salvation in its basic form, is simply our soul not suffering the judgment of hell. Adoption, as it is used and defined by Paul himself in the verses above, is the transformation of our body at the resurrection to be conformed to the physical image of Christ's resurrection body.
God could have ordained that salvation would not be concomitant to having a resurrection body just like Christ's own glorious body.
My definition? That's what the verses in the OP are saying, and nobody has pointed out a scriptural flaw in the OP.I disagree with your definition. Therefore it seems fruitless to argue when we cannot agree on the meaning of the terms being used.
Because it is a pointless and useless endeavor. You have boxed in the definition to your particular position and told others they can only argue within the parameters of that perspective. In that structure only a fool would engage you. I have already wasted too much time on this.My definition? That's what the verses in the OP are saying, and nobody has pointed out a scriptural flaw in the OP.
Why don't you give us your scriptural definition with defining cross-references?