There is a difference between "chosen in Christ" and being "in Christ." God choose His people on behalf of Christ (i.e. for the sake of Christ's work). However, chronologically, Andronicus and Junia were in Christ (i.e. experiencing the benefits of Christ's work in their lives as believers) before Paul.
This is what you are not understanding. God chose His people to be in Christ "before the foundation of the world." Because of this, God will also regenerate them at a certain point in time in their lives so that they are positionally in Christ and experience the benefits of a relationship with Him.
False. No where do the scriptures say we were chosen "TO BE" in Christ. That is a Reformed invention. The scriptures say we were chosen "in him", meaning a person is chosen when they enter the body of Christ upon faith in their lifetime. You are adding to scripture what it NEVER says.
Winman, I have answered this argument many times, yet you keep parroting it as if it stands.
"Foreknowledge" here is NOT merely a prescience of factual knowledge. It is a term of relationship. If God is the subject and a person (not the person's output) is the object, the word ginwskw or any of its cognates is a term of relationship.
False. The scriptures show we are not "known" of God until we believe in time.
Gal 4:9 But now, after that ye have known God, or rather are known of God, how turn ye again to the weak and beggarly elements, whereunto ye desire again to be in bondage?
Paul shows here that our personal intimate relationship with God begins when we believe in time (But NOW). But God in his foreknowledge could foresee this personal relationship before the foundation of the world.
Joseph did not "know" Mary until she gave birth to Jesus (Mat 1:25). Did Joseph just learn facts about Mary after Jesus was born?
Jesus "knows" His sheep and He gives them eternal life (John 10:27). Does Jesus possess mental facts about His sheep, or does this mean that He has a relationship with them?
Jesus tells reprobates at the judgment "I never knew you." (Mat 7:23) Does this mean that Jesus was factually unaware of the reprobates until their judgment?
Irrelevant, Joseph's relationship with Mary has nothing to do with election.
You are correct about Jesus saying he never knew unbelievers in a personal intimate way.
No. For God to know someone is for Him to have a relationship with him.
Adding the prefix pro does not turn the meaning of ginwskw from that of intimacy to that of mere factual information. It just means that God fore- relationshipped His elect. He chose them individually "before the foundation of the world" to be His people in Christ and to experience His fatherly love.
And I showed you from scripture that God does not know us in a personal, intimate way until we believe in time.
Compare 1 Peter 1:2 with Romans 8:29. "For whom he did foreknow..." It doesn't say that He foreknew they would believe of their own autonomous free will. It says that He foreknew them. It is an transitive active verb along with all the other transitive active verbs: called, justified, predestined, glorified.
It doesn't have to say that here, it says it elsewhere, such as Gal 4:9 and John 6:64-71. Galatians 4:9 especially shows we are not known of God in a personal way until we believe in time.
Just because the word is nominalized in 1 Peter 1:2, it does not mean that its meaning can be changed.
Who says the word changed? The definition of forknowledge and foreknew are the same, only the tense has changed. Foreknew is past tense.
This is not the same context. I would also propose that "from the beginning" is not referring to "the foundation of the world," but rather to the context of His calling these disciples.
That is possible, and it is just as possible that Jesus meant from the beginning of time as he used in MANY scriptures. In fact, when he used this phrase he most often spoke of from the beginning of time.
Jhn 8:44 Ye are of your father the devil, and the lusts of your father ye will do. He was a murderer from the beginning, and abode not in the truth, because there is no truth in him. When he speaketh a lie, he speaketh of his own: for he is a liar, and the father of it.
Either way, Jesus knew who would not believe on him, and who should betray him, speaking of Judas. He said ONE of you is a devil speaking of Judas, showing he knew the other eleven were not. He knew these things before they occurred in time, that is foreknowledge. Foreknowledge can mean to know events before they happen, such as the case of Judas. You try to redefine the word to mean only to foreknow someone in a personal way. This is easily shown false;
Acts 2:23 Him, being delivered by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God, ye have taken, and by wicked hands have crucified and slain:
The word "foreknowledge" in Acts 2:23 cannot mean to know a person in a personal, intimate way, as Peter was speaking to unbelievers who crucified Jesus. Here Peter is speaking of the event, Jesus being crucified. This refutes your narrow definition of "foreknowledge", and proves foreknowledge can be speaking of a foreknown event.
The word for "knew" here is a form of eido, not ginwskw. It more often has to do with factual knowledge than ginwskw. eido can also mean "to see."
I don't know Greek, so I cannot debate you on the meaning here.
Yes, we observe that Jesus chose all these disciples to fulfill His purposes, even the betrayer. Jesus "knew [eido] from the beginning [when He chose them] who would believe and who would betray Him." They were all chosen for a particular purpose. eido is not quite the same as ginwskw, and let's not confuse the two.
Again, I do not know Greek, but the scriptures say Jesus knew "from the beginning" who believed not, and who "should" betray him. This is foreknowledge of a future event.
When a person is "known" in both Greek (ginwskw) and English, this means some form of relationship. Now, if God foreknows people, that means He fore-relationships them. To proginwskw a person does not mean to "foresee his faith." It means to know him personally "beforehand."
Again, Galatians 4:9 shows that God does not know us in a personal, intimate way until we believe in time.
God foreknowing (choosing to enter into a relationship with) a person before that person exists must mean that God elects that person effectually to be an object of His love logically before that person makes it mutual. We love Him because He first loved us. His love is the cause and our love to Him is the effect. There is no backwards causation in any of the passages you cited.
Foreknowledge simply means God can foresee who will believe on Jesus and enter into a personal relationship with him before it actually takes place. God can foresee his personal relationship with that person. Gal 4:9 shows we do not enter into a personal relationship with God until we believe in time.
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