Mallz wrote:God created time, He is outside it, not subject to it, like everything it is subject to Him.
Most definitely. And I agree with what you are saying Melanie. I appreciate your sound response, but I don't see it answering any of my questions
I don't believe predestination = Gods middle knowledge. God has natural, free and middle knowledge all the while we have self-determined wills.
My problem is that if OSAS is true, I see the middle knowledge being replaced by predestination. So I need a reconciliation between OSAS and predestination. But this explanation I feel would be better after I'm convinced through reason and divine revelation OSAS is true. Which of course I'm currently not.
So, there are two avenues I would like to know for me to accept OSAS, if anyone is up to it.
1) Through reason does OSAS work?
2) Through scripture is OSAS taught?
I don't believe predestination = God's middle knowledge either insomuch that while I sympathise with Luis de Molina's attempt to synchronise God's sovereignty with the free will, I don't think it's accurate or biblical to break down and categorise Gods wisdom and knowledge into 3 boxes.
Predestination is a biblical concept. It may not sit well with our inherit need for freedom, but that does not surpass our inherit need for order. God is the order of all things.
Christians hold onto this concept of freewill which is also biblical, with a strong desire for the need for freedom. The notion of predestination as treading on the toes of that freedom.
God works everything according to His purpose
Us included
One thing regardless of which stance a person adheres too that is in agreement is that God has a plan, His plan has been in effect since the dawn of time;
Plan: A scheme, program, or method worked out beforehand for the accomplishment of an objective
God has His methods to which He will always reach His objective. We just have to decide whether we want to part of His plan or outside it. Keeping in mind He already knows that choice we will make. It's impossible to reach an objective whilst leaving it to contingencies.
Our freewill is secondary to His order. We do not call God to us, we are accepting a gift that God brings to us according to His purpose. That is where our freewill lies, apart from that once we accept it, we surrender ourselves to His purpose. We have asked God to direct and steer our lives and that is exactly what He does.
When God sets out to achieve something, He does 100% of the time.
We may along the way make some poor choices that steer us off course, but if it is Gods plan, a plan that He had for us before we were born then it's impossible to end up anywhere but where God intended.
Ephesians 11:1 "In Him we were also chosen having been predestined according to the plan of Him who works out everything in conformity with the purpose of His will."
Romans 8:29 "For those God foreknew He also predestined..."
If OSAS rested entirely on us it would be completely fallible. If it rested on our own merits we would be saved then unsaved and saved again continuously depending on the day and what life throws at us, but it's saved according to His purpose, once that purpose is set in motion there is no conclusion but exactly the one God desires.