I’ll be Captain Obvious here and say, “Preordination and foreknowledge are not just two words that are spelled differently”I can accept @Keith Martin 's view, and I understand what @steve is implying, however if God created sinners and they sin, and He knows that sinners sin, and accepts it and use it for His purposes, isn't the idea of preordination a given? God's purpose is to remove sin. If God acted on His character of sinlessness then we would have been wiped out long ago, but because of Mercy and Grace He tolerates our sin, for a time, and uses it to move creation to where He wants it to be. Therefore, everything we do is preordained, because He has an outcome He is working towards.
I gave her the get, she could remarry.
It has also been said, ‘Whoever divorces his wife must give her a certificate of divorce.’ 32But I tell you that anyone who divorces his wife, except for sexual immorality, brings adultery upon her. And whoever marries a divorced woman commits adultery.
I cannot take a legalistic stance on a woman not being able to remarry after being divorced in our present society. It abandons too many women who were raised in bad theology.
For I wish that all men were even as I myself....let each one remain with God in that state in which he was called.
It may be that this particular passage is discussing "putting-away" / "separation", not full divorce (with paperwork). If so, then Jesus was saying that marrying a woman who has been separated from her husband but not truly divorced is adultery. That makes complete sense - but introduces other things to consider too. It's a complex issue.
It has also been said, ‘Whoever divorces his wife must give her a certificate of divorce.’ 32But I tell you that anyone who divorces his wife, except for sexual immorality, brings adultery upon her. And whoever marries a divorced woman commits adultery.
How can that be exactly?
I answered according to my understanding at that time.
Today I wouldn’t consider divorce.
I’ll be Captain Obvious here and say, “Preordination and foreknowledge are not just two words that are spelled differently”
The fact that God knows everything that’s gonna happen, and could make it happen if he so chooses to, does not mean that he preordained it to happen, or made it happen just because we think he should have, or must have.To understand the two together you have to include the words sovereignty and omniscient, both spelled different but can be combined as far as God is concerned.
It is interesting to me that marrying a divorced woman is still considered adultery, as if the marriage still existed. It is as if a woman getting a divorce does nothing.
The fact that God knows everything that’s gonna happen, and could make it happen if he so chooses to, does not mean that he preordained it to happen, or made it happen just because we think he should have, or must have.
It’s a logical leap to think that because he binds it in heaven, that he either approves of it or caused it to happen.
It’s also a way of minimizing the seriousness of the vows by assuming if it didn’t work out that it must have been his will because apparently He didn’t bind the marriage in the beginning. Which leads to the skewed opinion that the dissolution of that marriage is ultimately ok because we must have been out of Gods will to enter it in the first place. We’re actually realigning ourselves with Gods will by dissolving that marriage.
If this ^^^^ is true, then we are not liable for our own choices and the repercussions for those choices. God would be unjust to punish us or hold us accountable for our vows.
There’s just too many logical fallacies in this perspective for me to give it any credibility. But then I have a hard time with anyone that tries to shift the blame instead of ownership of their own failures
There are undoubtedly certain specific events that have been preordained by God to happen. This does not necessarily mean that every individual event is therefore preordained.preordination
/priːɔːdɪˈneɪʃ(ə)n/
noun
1. the action of determining an outcome or course of action in advance:
If you read the definition preordination includes with in it an 'action of determination in regards to a set course of action. If time is only relative to us, then everything we do has already been completed according to God. Therefore, what we do is preordained by God and to God. However, to us we don't see it that way. I am trying to understand creation from God's point of view not man's.
I know a woman who never remarried, and she has been divorced for 30 years. She took Rom 7:2-3 seriously. Now she also did not attend two of her daughters weddings, because they were marrying divorced men. If she had only known that the prohibitions against remarriage are primarily aimed at the wife, who knows? She might have gone.
preordination
/priːɔːdɪˈneɪʃ(ə)n/
noun
1. the action of determining an outcome or course of action in advance:
If you read the definition preordination includes with in it an 'action of determination in regards to a set course of action. If time is only relative to us, then everything we do has already been completed according to God. Therefore, what we do is preordained by God and to God. However, to us we don't see it that way. I am trying to understand creation from God's point of view not man's.
I firmly believe this, I feel that He actually told me this about a certain situation that I experienced.God does not need to know everything in advance.
He does not want to know everything in advance,
I agree. The parable of the sower comes to mind. The sower sowed the seed, and it fell on rocky ground, but it was the enemy that came and ate the seeds.There are undoubtedly certain specific events that have been preordained by God to happen. This does not necessarily mean that every individual event is therefore preordained.
Foreknowledge also does not mean that the events are preordained, just preknown. Preordination must, of necessity, involve intent. IF God preordained (or intended) you to do a particular sin, then the fault would lie with God for the sin you commit as you would have no ability to reject or resist an omnipotent God. If he were to then punish you for the sin he had preordained you to do, that would make him an unjust Judge, which he is anything but. The fact that He foreknows your sin does not in any way prove that He has preordained you to that sin or is in any way complicit in its occurrences. This is completely antithetical to the very nature of a righteous God.
. . . For God cannot be tempted with evil, neither tempteth he any man: but every man is tempted, when he is drawn away of his own lust, and enticed. Then when lust hath conceived, it bringeth forth sin: and sin, when it is finished, bringeth forth death. Do not err, my beloved brethren. Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above and cometh down from the Father of lights
I think this thread is meat.
IF God preordained (or intended) you to do a particular sin, then the fault would lie with God for the sin you commit as you would have no ability to reject or resist an omnipotent God. If he were to then punish you for the sin he had preordained you to do, that would make him an unjust Judge, which he is anything but. The fact that He foreknows your sin does not in any way prove that He has preordained you to that sin or is in any way complicit in its occurrences. This is completely antithetical to the very nature of a righteous God.
. . . For God cannot be tempted with evil, neither tempteth he any man: but every man is tempted, when he is drawn away of his own lust, and enticed. Then when lust hath conceived, it bringeth forth sin: and sin, when it is finished, bringeth forth death. Do not err, my beloved brethren. Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above and cometh down from the Father of lights