Dr. Jack L. Arnold Equipping
Pastors International Theology
Proper
Lesson
5
THE DECREE (PLAN)
I. DEFINITION: ÒGod from all eternity, did, by the
most wise and holy counsel of His own will, freely,
and unchangeable ordain whatsoever comes to pass: yet so, as thereby neither is
God the author of sin, nor is
violence offered to the will of the creatures; nor is the liberty or
contingency of second
causes taken away, but rather establishedÓ (Westminster Confession of Faith
III-I).
II. TERMINOLOGY
A.
Omniscience: A knowledge of all things actual and
possible.
B.
Decree (Plan):
GodÕs one eternal purpose, according to the counsel of His own will, whereby
for His own glory He has unconditionally foreordained whatsoever comes to
pass. NOTE. Such words in the Bible as counsel,
will and purpose refer to the divine decree. Often the word ÒforeordinationÓ is used theologically to
speak of the preplanning of all events and the destiny of people.
C.
Election: An active word whereby God picks out
certain individuals among the mass of sinful humanity for himself according to
the good pleasure of His will.
1.
Different Types Of Election
a.
Election of Christ ( 1 Pet. 2:6)
b.
Election of Israel (Isa. 45:4 )
c.
Election of the Apostle Paul (Acts 9:15)
d.
Election of angels (1 Tim. 5:21)
e.
Election of certain individuals (Eph.
1:4; 2 Thess. 2:13)
f.
Election that is negative (John 6:70)
2.
Different Terminology Having The Same
Meaning As Election
a.
Appointed (John 15:16)
b.
Ordained (Acts 13:48)
c.
Choose (Eph. 1:4)
3.
Views On Election
a.
God elects on the basis of human merit
– foreseen good works (liberals).
OBJECTION: Salvation is not
by good works (Eph. 2:8-9).
b.
God elects on the basis of foreseen faith
(free willers). OBJECTION: 1) Foreknowledge is a loving
relationship not prescience; 2) Faith is an act and therefore a work of man;
yet salvation is not of works because faith is a gift (Phil. 1:29); 3) Election
according to foreknowledge would not change the number of people who would be
saved – the number is the same.
c.
God elected one individual, Christ, and
elects the church corporately on the basis of a personÕs faith in Christ. God elects the church in Christ and all
who trust in Christ are among the elect (1 Pet. 2:6; Eph. 1:4) (Barth, Shank,
Pinnock). OBJECTION: 1) It is clearly stated that salvation
took place before the foundation of the world not in time (Eph. 1:4); 2) Acts
13:48 makes it clear that individuals are elected; 3) There are verses which
speak of elect individuals (2 John 1; Rom. 16:13).
d.
God elects people to service not
salvation. OBJECTION: 2 Thess. 2:13 definitely states the
election of individuals.
D.
Predestination: An active word indicating a
predetermining of the destiny of the elect and looks to the end of GodÕs choices—the
glorification of the saint (Eph. 1:5,11; Rom. 8:29-30). The word ÒpredestinationÓ is used only
of the destiny of the elect and is based on the plan of God (Rom. 8:28).
E.
Foreknowledge: An active word to indicate a loving
relationship, based on the deliberate judgment of God in the eternal plan,
which God sustains with certain individuals, which results in His choice of
them for salvation.
ÒForeknowledgeÓ is only used of persons not events.
1.
Definition: Biblical: A loving relationship which God sustains
to certain individuals by choosing them.
Theological: A prior
knowledge of actual things, involving a conscious relationship and
certainty. Philosophical: A knowledge of a thing before in
happens.
2.
Scripture: Amos 3:2; 1 Cor. 8:3; Gal. 4:9; Acts 2:23;
26:5; Rom. 8:29; 11:2; 1 Pet. 1:2).
3.
Relation to the Plan: GodÕs foreknowledge is based upon His
plan (Rom. 8:28 and 29-30) -
purpose (plan) comes before foreknowledge. Foreknowledge implies certainty. The proper logical order is omniscience, foreordination,
foreknowledge, election, predestination.
F. Purpose: This is an active word to show that the entire program
of manÕs salvation is a planned program (Rom. 1:3; Rom. 3:25; Eph. 1:9; Rom.
8:28; Rom. 9:11; Eph. 1:11; 3:11; 2 Tim. 1:9).
G. Preterition: A passive word which indicates God
passed by some people, not electing these to salvation. This is a theological word.
H.
Retribution or Reprobation: A passive word which means the sinner
receives his deserved results and in this case the deserved result is eternal
judgment. This is a theological
word.
I.
Perdition: This word means a judgment for all
sinners in hell.
J.
Comprehending Predestination and Election
1. Stating Election
a.
The Bible student must state the doctrine
of election as the Scriptures present it without going beyond, and yet, still
including all that the Scriptures do say.
b.
The subject of election, while difficult,
is still Biblical, and one cannot teach too many books of The Bible without
understanding this doctrine.
c.
When a person approaches this subject, he
must take a large dose of intellectual humility. No one has all the
answers!
2.
Getting the Proper Viewpoint:
a.
When approaching election, one must look
at it as God does, not forming a doctrine from reasoning or logic. If one looks
at this subject as he thinks it should be, then he will never get the
Scriptural viewpoint about it.
b.
One must come to the Scriptures with an
objective attitude, desiring to know what God says about election. A person
must never come to the Scriptures with preconceived ideas and force them upon
the text. The task of the Bible student is not to say how or why, but what does
the Bible teach.
c.
One must never fit God into his own mold.
Man has a tendency and desire to define God according to what he thinks God
should be rather than taking at face -value what God says He is.
d.
A person must first see God as He is,
then he wonÕt have such a problem in seeing what He does.
e.
No Christian is obligated to defend GodÕs
honor. He is God from everlasting
to everlasting. His honor is never at stake.
3.
Maintaining Balance: The problem is maintaining a proper
balance between divine sovereignty and human responsibility. An improper
balance on either aspect is many times fatal to Christian experience (cf. Luke
22:22; Matt. 11:27-30; in. 6:37; Phil. 2:12,12).
4.
Infinite and Finite
a.
We may not be able to grasp completely
this marvelous doctrine of election, but we can believe it, rejoice in it and
live by it.
b.
The problem of sovereignty and will is a
paradox or antinomy to the human, finite mind, but its no problem at all to
God, and we will never completely understand it until we go to be with our
Lord.
c.
The Bible is full of paradoxes which the
human mind cannot fully comprehend. Yet we believe these paradoxes because we
are GodÕs chosen children, who have been born again and now have divine under
standing. We know them to be true because we have experienced them in our
lives. Some of these paradoxes
are: 1) the hypostatic union; 2) Jesus Christ who is true humanity and undiminished
deity united in one person forever; 3) the resurrection; 4) the Trinity; 5) miracles, etc. We do not understand in detail these
concepts but we accept them because GodÕs Word teaches them.
5.
Christian Experience
a.
This is one of the most blessed doctrines
all Scripture and if properly understood will change your whole Christian
experience.
b.
This doctrine will not cause you to be
less zealous or active for Christ.
If anything it will make you more careful, obedient, confident,
etc.
c.
This doctrine will make the LordÕs
presence very real in your life.
d.
This doctrine will stimulate your prayer
life be- cause it will make you utterly dependent on God for results.
e.
This doctrine will give you a new
perspective of the God you love.
f.
This doctrine will cause you to relate
all Scripture back to the person of God.
g.
This doctrine will give you the boldness
to stand against all opposing forces of Christianity because you will realize
that you are a favored child of God in His infinite plan for this world.
h.
This doctrine is the basis for all true
humility.
i.
This doctrine will cause the child of God
to want to be obedient and place himself under the sovereign control of
God.
j.
This doctrine will increase your
evangelistic zeal and cause you to want to be an effective witness.
k.
This doctrine will prepare the believer
for the trials of Life (2 Tim. 2:10).
l.
This doctrine will elicit praise of the believer to the glory
of God (Rom. 11:33-36).
m.
This doctrine will teach one the meaning of true
worship.
n.
This doctrine takes the pressure off one
to produce numbers of souls and teaches him to be faithful.
o.
This doctrine wi1l open up in a new
understanding and perspective in almost every chapter of Scripture.
III.
NATURE OF THE DECREE
A.
There is one Decree but many parts.
B.
Every detail is included in the
Decrees. Nothing is left out.
C.
The Decree includes means as well as
ends.
D.
GodÕs plan can never be thwarted. Since God is God, His sovereignty can
never be thwarted.
E.
GodÕs decree differs at time with His
desires. God has obligated Himself
to carry out His plan. He is not
willing that people perish but in His plan certain ones perish and certain ones
are saved. Otherwise God is not
omnipotent and is unable to carry out His plan.
IV.
PURPOSE OF THE DECREE
A.
The ultimate purpose of the decree is to
glorify God (Eph. 1:6; 12,14).
B.
One must believe that all things
harmonize in the plan of God to glorify Him better than any other plan.
C.
We, as humans, can only see a small part
of GodÕs plan, but we must understand that God is in control of all things if
we are to have a normal Christian experience.
D.
Points to Ponder:
1.
Arminians often say that one can: 1).
Thwart the will of God by not praying for all men to be saved; the result being
that all men are not saved; 2). Thwart the will of God by not being sanctified.
2.
Objection:
All men are not saved; all men are not sanctified. What happened? CouldnÕt God
carry out His plan? If He canÕt
then He must be less than God?
3.
Answer: Either GodÕs
will has been thwarted or this could not happen because God is sovereign. We
must harmonize the desire of God and the will (plan) of God.
4.
Correct View:
GodÕs plan includes both those things, which God desires, and those things
which God does not desire. GodÕs desire is what He would like it to be
(revealed will) but His plan includes everything.
5.
Problem: If God is
sovereign, why canÕt He fulfill His desires? Answer: God could if He chose to do so, but God
has been limited by His own plan.
He does not choose to fulfill all His desires, so that He may carry out
His plan.
V.
DECREE AND GODÕS SOVEREIGNTY
A.
Definition of Sovereignty:
GodÕs absolute control of and authority over anything or anybody with no
limitations. God is either sovereign or He is not God! There is no law of any
kind or description anywhere in the universe that can coerce or force God to do
anything that He does not please to do.
B.
Scriptures on Sovereignty
1.
God Has a Plan:
Acts 15:13; Eph. 3:11; Isa. 46:9, 10; Matt. 25:34,41; Eph. 1:4; 2 Tim. 1:9;
Acts 2:23; Acts 4:27-28.
2.
God Will Certainly Carry His Plan Out:
Num. 23:19; Isa. 14:24; Psa. 10:4; Jer. 4:28; James 1:17; Psa. 119:89; Mal.
3:6; Prov. 19:21; Deut. 32:39; Psa. 135:6; Dan. 4:35; Eph. 1:11; Isa. 14:24,
27; Psa. 115:3; Isa. 55:11; Rom. 9:20-21; Psa. 139:16; Rom. 8:29; Job 14:5;
Jer. 15:2; Acts 2:47; Acts 13:48; 1 Cor. 4:7; Luke. 22:22.
3.
God Cannot Do Anything That Contradicts
His Nature (therefore His plan is perfect, just and good):
Psa. 145:17; Gen. 18:25; Psa. 145:9; Isa. 45:19; Deut. 32:4; Psa. 33:4-5.
4.
GodÕs Plan is All Inclusive:
Nahum 1:3; Matt. 5:45; Job 12:15; Amos 4:7; Job 5:10; Acts 14:17; Matt. 6:26;
Isa. 40:12; Matt. 10:29; Luke. 12:7; Psa. 104:21,29; Psa. 145:15-16; Psa.
147:9; Psa. 47:7; Job 38:41; Dan. 4:17; Dan. 2:21; Psa. 33:10; Hab. 1:6; Phil.
2:13; Isa. 10:15; Prov. 16:4; 1 Cor. 4:7; Ex. 14:4, 7; 2 Sam. 21:1,3; 2 Sam. 10:15; 2 Sam. 16:11-12; 2 Sam. 12:11; 1 Sam.
16:14; 1 Sam. 2:25; 1 Kings 22:23; 1 Kings 12:15; Jud. 9:23; Rev. 17:17; John
12:40; Isa. 53:10; Isa. 10:5,15; Jud. 4; 1 Chron. 5:22; Matt. 26:31; Eph.
1:11-12; 2 Pet. 2:12.
5.
Scriptures on the Will of Man:
John 8:34; Rom. 6:21; 2 Tim. 2:26; 2 Pet. 2:19; Prov. 5:22; Acts. 8:23; Rom.
7:15; Matt. 7:23; Psa. 76:10; John 6:44; John. 15:16; 2 Thess. 2:13; 1 Cor.
1:26; John 6:65; Rom. 11:4; Rom. 5:10; John 1:13; John 17:12; Eph. 1:11; Acts.
13:48; James. 1:18.
6.
Scriptures on Election:
John 1:13; 6:44; 17:2; 6:65; 15:16; Acts 13:48; Acts 16:14; Rom. 9:11; 1 Cor.
1:26; Eph. 1:11; 2 Thess. 2:13; 2 Tim. 1:9; Eph. 1:4.
7.
God Reigns: 1 Chron. 16:31; 2 Chron. 20:6.
VI.
LOGICAL
ORDER OF THE DECREE (See Chart)
VII. PROBLEM
PASSAGES ON THE DECREE
A. 1 Tim. 2:4: ÒWho wants (wills) all men to be saved and come to a knowledge of the
truth.Ó
1.
Modified Calvinist:
They take the word ÒwantsÓ (thelo) to
mean the emotional will of God and not his decretive will. Many times in the New Testament Thelo means a wish or desire
and is not as strong a word as boulomai
which speaks of GodÕs sovereign, unchangeable will. POINT: Thus
emotionally God wishes all mankind to be saved, but since it is in His plan
that not all will be saved, His decretive will (boulomai) is that will which shall come to pass. A distinction must
be made between what God wills and what God desires.
2. Calvinist
a.
Meaning of ÒwantÓ
(1)
In this context of 1 Tim. 2:4, God will
have no more to be saved than He will have Òcome unto the knowledge of the
truth. Therefore the context favors GodÕs decretive will, not emotional will.
(2)
Thelo
is used in many other scriptures to refer to GodÕs decretive will (John. 1:13; John. 17:24; Rom. 9:18;
Phil. 2:13; 1 Pet. 3:17). POINT:
The same thelo which indicates
that God desires that all men be saved is the same thelo which He exercises to harden whom He will (Rom. 9:13). The
Old Testament speaks of the fact that all of GodÕs desires come to pass (Job.
23:13; Psa. 132:13-14) so why canÕt they come to pass in 2 Tim. 2:4?
CONCLUSION: The thelo here will come
to pass. The reason the weaker word for will is used here is because the
ÒwillÓ of God is not the stress of the passage; rather the stress is upon
prayer for all classes of men, vv. 1-2, and upon the one mediator between God
and men, namely Christ, v. 5.
b. Meaning of ÒAllÓ
(1). The Arminian (freewiller) takes
the ÒallÓ as absolute and believes that it is GodÕs will for all mankind
to be saved but they arenÕt saved—because they refuse to believe by an
act of their own will.
OBJECTIONS: If the Arminian position is correct then the following facts
are true: (a) God fails His own
purpose and is therefore not sovereign and if not sovereign He is not God. If
it is GodÕs will that all men should be saved, why arenÕt all-men saved? Has God failed his purpose? Thus the
Arminian is forced to make the ÒwillÓ refer to His emotional will, not
decretive will. (b) If it is GodÕs sovereign will that all men be saved, then
all men will be saved, and this verse teaches universalism. Thus we have no
need for the cross or the preaching of the gospel for all men will be
ultimately saved.
(2). ÒAllÓ in context is to be
understood in its relative sense and to be given a limited meaning. ÒAllÓ,
therefore, refers to mankind in a relative sense. The prayer of 2 Tim. 2:1 is to be made for all men of
all sorts, ranks, authority, etc. (cf. Jer. 29:1-2). It is GodÕs will to save
all sorts of individuals from among mankind.
(3). ÒAllÓ occurs about 500 times in
the New Testament and is used in a restricted (relative) sense approximately
80% of the time (cf. Rom. 5:18).
(4). Conclusion: Obviously we must
give a limited meaning to the word ÒallÓ if it is to be intelligibly
understood.
C.
2 Pet. 3:9:
The Lord is not slow in keeping his
promise, as some understand slowness.
He is patient with you, not wanting anyone (any) to perish, but
everyone(all) to come to repentance.
1.
Arminian and Modified Calvinist:
They refer the ÒanyÓ and ÒallÓ to all mankind without exception. The Arminian
believes that it is not GodÕs will for any to perish whatsoever. The modified
Calvinist makes a distinction between GodÕs decretive will and His emotional
will; that it is not GodÕs desire that any perish but in His hidden plan some
do perish and nothing is outside of GodÕs plan.
2.
Calvinist.
a.
The word ÒwillingÓ is the Greek word boulomai which speaks of GodÕs sovereign
will (cf. Matt. 11:27; Luke 10:22).
b.
The context of this verse is very
important. The ÔÔanyÓ and ÒallÓ after the ÒyouÓ of the same verse refers back
to Òdear friendsÓ (3:1, 8). The
ÒyouÓ refers to the believers at that time. The ÒanyÓ and ÒallÓ refer to the
elect of God who are yet to be called to repentance (cf. 2 Tim. 2:10). In other
words this verse teaches security as well as the surety that God will send back
His son a second time as He has promised.
c.
Peter was an apostle to the Jews (Gal.
2:9). This epistle as well as the first epistle of Peter was written to Jewish
believers (1 Pet. 1:1). Indirectly
Peter is telling them that not only is God longsuffering to ÒyouÓ (Jewish
believers, at least primarily), but He is not willing that anyone of you should
perish (the elect that are yet to believe), for He wills that all (both Jew and
Gentile, cf. John 11:51,52) should come to repentance.
3.
Third Possible Interpretation of 2 Pet.
3:9: It is possible that this verse does not refer
to salvation at all. The context
is about false teachers who Here denying the return of the Lord Jesus Christ.
Apparently some of the Christians had fallen prey to this false teaching. Thus God is longsuffering towards those
who had fallen into apostasy, not willing, that any should perish (perish in
the sense of holding to this false teaching) but that all should come to
repentance (that this Christians should repent of this false teaching).
4.
Conclusion:
Theologically this passage would not favor the Arminian position. If God is not
willing that any should perish, why do some perish? CouldnÕt God carry out His
plan? If He couldnÕt carry out His own plan, He is less than a man. A sovereign God must carry out His will
or He is not God.
VIII.
THEOLOGICAL PROBLEMS AND THE DECREE
A. The Problem of
Foreknowledge
1.
Need for This Study:
For centuries false teachers have perverted GodÕs foreknowledge in order to set
aside His unconditional election unto eternal life. When the subject of divine foreknowledge is expounded, the
enemy sends along some man to argue that election is based upon foreknowledge
of God (because God knew that certain ones would believe) He accordingly,
elected them unto salvation. But such a statement is radically strong. It
repudiates the truth of total depravity, for it argues that there is something
good in some men. It takes away the independence of God, for it makes His
decrees, namely election and predestination, rest upon what He discovers in the
creature. POINT: Many sincere Christians have been and are confused on this
matter—hence the need to make known what the Word of God says about GodÕs
foreknowledge.
2.
Definition:
Foreknowledge is an active word indicating a loving relationship which God
sustains with certain individuals, based on the deliberate decree of God in His
eternal plan, which results in His choice of them for salvation. It is a
sovereign distinguishing love.
3.
Viewpoints:
a.
Arminians
(freewillers): They take the word
ÒforeknowledgeÓ as foresight or prescience and relate it to the concept of
omniscience (all knowing). They
say that because God knows all, He looked down the corridors of time and saw
how men would believe and elected them on that basis.
b.
OBJECTIONS:
(1). Freewillers do not take the
literal meaning of the Greek word Òforeknowledge,Ó which is to know
experientially beforehand.
(2). Freewillers equate foreknowledge and omniscience,
which is theologically and Biblically incorrect.
(3). The freewiller viewpoint makes
the whole plan of God dependent upon the actions of men. In fact, the Arminian
makes God less than a man when he says that God looked down the corridors of
time and saw how men would believe and elected them on that basis.
c. Calvinist.
(Sovereignty): They take
ÒforeknowledgeÓ to be part of the eternal decree of God, which is Biblical. The
proper theological order is omniscience, foreordination and knowledge.
4. Foreknowledge Considered From the
Original Languages:
a.
The Greek
(1). The word
ÒforeknowledgeÓ is proginosko (verb
form) and proginosis.(noun form) in
the Greek.
(2). Pro
means before and ginosko means
an active or experiential knowledge.
(3). In 1 Cor. 8:3 ginosko means an active experimental
love. God could not be using this in a passive way. Again the same idea is seen
in Gal. 4:9. In both of these cases the word Òto knowÓ or ginosko indicates a selective love that is exercising knowledge
with selective love. Thus proginosko
denotes a selective knowledge beforehand. And proginosis acknowledges a special relationship. (Acts. 2:23; 26:5;
Rom. 3:29; 11:2; 1 Pet. 1:2, 20)
b.
The Hebrew
(1). In Amos 3:2 the word ÒknownÓ (zyadah) refers to more than just passive
knowledge or God wouldnÕt be God.
Did God only know about the nation Israel and none of the other
nations? Of course not! Because He is omniscient He knew all
about the other nations. Therefore
the words Òyou only have I knownÓ show a close intimate relationship and is
almost synonymous for the idea of selection.
(2). Hosea 13:5 again indicates an intimate
relationship.
(3). Used also of the sex act in the Old
Testament (Adam knew Eve.)
c.
Conclusion: The Biblical meaning behind the word
ÒforeknowledgeÓ is a loving relationship which God sustains to certain
individuals because of His decree.
5. Foreknowledge
Considered Theologically: ÒIn
the text it will be found that God is working according to His own purpose, and
that this purpose includes all that comes to pass; therefore, foreknowledge in
God, as presented in Scriptures, must be contemplated, not as mere preview of
events that Blind fate might engender or that are supposed to arise in the will
of men or angels, but as a program incorporated in the decree of God respecting
all things.Ó (Lewis Sperry Chafer,
Systematic Theology, Vol. III, p.
158).
6. Biblical Usage of
Foreknowledge:
a.
ÒTo foreknowÓ is used five times in the
New Testament (Rom. 8:29; 11:2; Acts 26:5; 2 Pet. 3:7; 1 Pet. 1:20) and two
times by Paul. ÒForeknowledgeÓ
occurs twice (1 Pet. 1:2; Acts 2:23).
b.
2 Pet. 3:17: Here the word seems to retain its classical Greek meaning of
previous knowledge much like the English connotation of foreknowledge.
c.
Acts 26:5: Here the word involves a previous knowledge but also a
personal, vital first hand knowledge of Paul. Paul was not know passively but actively.
d.
Acts 2:23: Here the basic thought is that foreknowledge is connected up
with the eternal decree or plan of God.
The words Òset purposesÓ and ÒforeknowledgeÓ are linked up very
closely. Thus these are two
aspects of one eternal decree.
Foreknowledge is related to the decree and shows an active, deliberate
knowledge of the Son of God to go to the Cross. The word ÒforeknowledgeÓ therefore refers to that counsel of
God in which after deliberative judgment, the Lord was to be delivered into
human hands.
e.
Rom. 11:2: ÒGod did not reject
His people whom He foreknew.Ó
Romans 11 tells us that God has not finished with the nation
Israel. Why? They are His chosen people (Amos 3:2). Foreknowledge here is the same in
essence as election. Not a passive
knowledge, but an active knowledge.
f.
1 Peter 1:2 and 1:20: ÒWho
was chosen (foreknown) before the creation of the world.Ó This is a
reference to Jesus Christ. The
word ÒchosenÓ is the word ÒforeknowledgeÓ in 1 Pet. 1:2. Was Christ just passively foreknown by
the Father? No! It was an active, vital, loving
relationship between the Son and the Father through all eternity. It is interesting to note that the
translator of 1 Peter, in the King James, translated the word ÒforeknownÓ as
ÒforeordainedÓ because he saw the two as basically the same.
g.
Notice in 1 Pet. 1:2 it says that the
Christian Òhas been chosen according to
the foreknowledge of God.Ó The
word Òaccording toÓ (kata) in the
Greek means by the norm or standard of. Thus we were elected according to the standard of GodÕs
love. ÒAccordingÓ may also have
the idea of domination because kata
means down. The election of
Christians from the masses of humanity was dominated, controlled or determined
by the foreknowledge of God.
Possibly it would be correct to translate this as, ÒElect according to
election,Ó or ÒElect according to foreordination,Ó or ÒElect according to GodÕs
selection,Ó etc. or Òelect according to selective love.Ó
h.
Romans 8:29: ÒFor those God foreknew He
also predestined.Ó It does not
say ÒwhatÓ but ÒthoseÓ (people).
The New Testament never uses this word in the sense of what a man would
do, but what God would do for man.
From all eternity the Father foreknew the Christian, and based on that
loving, deliberate, personal foreknowledge He chose, and predestinated the
Christian. POINT: This foreknowlege is related back to
GodÕs purpose and calling (Rom. 8:28).
Thus it cannot mean prescience or foresight.
i.
Conclusion: The word ÒforeknowedgeÓ means to know
experientially beforehand. It does
not mean a passive mystical knowledge such as prior knowledge or prescience as
we would think of it in the English.
On the contrary, it is an active, conscious knowledge between the
subject and the object. It is a
loving relationship which God, the Knower, sustains to the elect, the known,
that transcends all eternity. In
eternity past, God the Father knew all the elect personally, vitally and
lovingly. POINT: God is not a crystal ball-gazer in that
He looks down the corridors of time to see how men will believe and act and
then set His plan based on their actions.
No! God is God, the
Creator, the First cause, the author of salvation. He does all according to His own will and for His own
glory. POINT; Foreknowledge always refers to knowing
persons, not events and speaks of a loving relationship God sustains to certain
individuals.
7. Foreknowledge and
Arminianism:
a.
The Position: The Arminian says that God in
omniscience looked down the corridors of time and thus foreknew how men would
act and events would turn out, and He set His plan on that foreknowledge.
b.
The Problem: The Arminian still must deal with the
problem of a sovereign plan. God
must be in control or He is not God.
If God foreknew how things were going to happen as the Arminian claims,
how did He make the events certain?
No matter by what means He got His information, God had to set a plan in
motion and this plan is certain.
Thus a logical Arminian must believe that God is in control of History;
thus accept the concept of Òfore-ordination.Ó
B.
The Problem of Double-Predestination
1.
Introduction: Nowhere in the whole Bible does it
directly indicate that there is a double-predestination—that is GodÕs
choice and predestination of the elect to salvation and the choice and
predestination of the non-elect to judgment. The Bible does teach the election and predestination of some
to salvation, and it may be implied from certain scriptures that the destinies
of all men are foreordained. The
doctrine of sovereign election carried to its logical conclusion will produce
the concept of double-predestination.
However scripture is the final authority, not human emotion or
reasoning. The emphasis in the
Bible is always the election of some to salvation, not the election of some to
perdition. POINT: We must always stick close to the
emphasis of scripture and not always draw every doctrinal teaching to its
logical conclusion. POINT: If one can just stick with the emphasis
of scripture, he will avoid many problems. The electing of some for salvation is an active word and the
passing by some for salvation is a passive word and God never delights in the
judgment of the unsaved.
PONT: It seems that the
writers of scripture go out of their way to avoid the teaching of
double-predestination but are bold in their teaching of GodÕs sovereign
election to salvation.
2.
Problem Passages
a.
Jude 4: ÒFor there are certain men crept in
unawares, who were before of old ordained to this condemnation.Ó
(KJV). The word ÒordainedÓ is too
strong a word for the Greek is prographo. This could be translated, ÒWho for a long time have been
marked out (written about) for this judgment.Ó POINT: It refers
to predictive prophecy not GodÕs decretive will.
b.
2 Peter 2:12:
The Greek says, ÒBut these, as natural
animals without reason, having been born unto capture and corruption (depravity).Ó This merely says that the false
teachers were born in corruption but says nothing about double-predestination.
c.
Rom. 9:22: ÒVessels
of wrath fitted to destruction.Ó
Paul does not say God fitted them and seems to go out of his way to make
this point but the context would imply that God was the agent in this act.
d.
Rom. 9:18: ÒTherefore
God has mercy on whom he wants to have mercy, and he hardens whom he wants to
harden.Ó This is the most
difficult verse but it only says God has the right to harden individuals but
this is not related to double-predestination.
e.
2 Thess. 2:10-12
ÒThey perish because they refused to
love the truth and so be saved.
For this reason God sends them a powerful delusion so that they will
believe the lie and so that all will be condemned who have not believed the
truth.Ó This verse says God
will work on these to get them to believe a lie and they shall be damned. This is apparently after they have
rejected the truth.
f.
1 Thess. 5:9 ÒFor
God did not appoint us to suffer wrath but to receive salvation through our
Lord Jesus Christ.Ó The
implication here is that some are appointed to wrath (judgment). However Paul may just be using the
negative thought to turn them to the fact that they had been appointed by God
to salvation.
g.
Other verses:
There are other verses that imply double-predestination but all can be
adequately explained (cf. John 9:39; John 12:39-40; Rom. 8:11; Isa. 45:9; Prov.
22:8; Prov. 16:4; Hab. 1:12).
3. Conclusion: The verses above do not directly teach double-predestination
but they ought to bring all men to a sober realization that God is sovereign
and can do as He pleases with men.
C.
The Problem of Sin
(cf. ÒGod Permitted SinÓ by Dr. Jack Arnold)
D.
The Problem of Suffering
(cf. ÒGod Allows SufferingÓ by Dr. Jack Arnold)
E.
The Problem of Fatalism
(cf. ÒSovereignty and ResponsibilityÓ by Jack Arnold)
IX.
THE ORDO SALUTUS
A.
Introduction: The ordo salutus deals with the
lapsarian (fall) question. This
question is really academic for God did it all at once but it is interesting to
try and put together GodÕs thoughts logically. There are three positions among Calvinists on the lapsarian
question. The Suprelapsarian
(election before the fall), the Infralapsarian (election after the fall) and
the Sublapsarian (election after the fall and GodÕs provision at the cross).
B.
The Positions:
Supralapsarian
Infralapsarian Sublapsarian
Elect Create Create
Create Fall Fall
Fall Elect Provision
of Salvation
Provision of Salvation Provision of
Salvation Elect
Application of Salvation Application of
Salvation Application
of Salvation
C.
Conclusion: A Supralapsarian and Infralapsarian
would be strict Calvinists because they would believe in limited
atonement. The Supralapsarian
would be a modified Calvinist, believing in unlimited atonement for the world
but limited in actuality to the elect.