God, in His holy wrath, hated Esau and predestined to reprobation before he was even born. Such is God's right to do so. God predestines the elect to salvation and the reprobate to damnation.
Listen to what you are saying AMR.
"God is RIGHT to predestine people to Hell BEFORE they were ever born!"
And, yes, I hate my mother and father, in the sense that Christ was commanding in Mt. 10:37 and Luke 14:26. In Luke, Christ was using an ancient instrument of rhetorical comparison, in effect, stating that your love for me (Jesus) must be so great that it would appear as hate when compared to your love of your parents. And, yes, I affirm that my love for Christ is so great that it appears as if I hate my own parents.
Brilliant answer! Dead on correct. This is basically the answer I've been trying to draw out of Lonster.
In short Jesus was using a figure of speech. He wasn't saying to actually hate your parents, what He was saying was to love your family and love Me even more.
On what basis do you claim that Jesus' use of the term is a figure of speech and God's use is not?
Some make the mistake of trying to link verses in Mt. and Luke with Malachi and Esau. They would claim that God only loved Esau less, much, much less, but He still loved him. No, this is not what the passage states and the rest of the bible teaches about the sovereignty of God. Much straining is required to make the Esau passage into something different. There is no connection between them unless one strains to make the connection.
I don't believe that the passage is talking about the two boys at all! Indeed, it is abundanly clear that God is not talking about Jacob and Esau but rather the two nations which would come from them.
God very simply does not hate unborn babies.
God's predestining of the reprobates is a harsh doctrine (to our finite minds), but it is scriptural. I always find it interesting that persons that teach the doctrine of the Trinity, they ask persons coming to study to put aside their preconceived notions and not rely upon unaided human reason to determine what can or cannot be true about God. The same persons will insist that the Scriptures be the unquestioned authoritative guide, too. All good advice and instruction. Yet these same persons are unwilling to follow these same rules when encountering God's sovereign predestination.
Anyone who would advise against the use of sound reason in the study or verification of ANY doctrine, including the Trinity, is a false teacher and a fool. His mind is debased and separated from the mooring of Scripture. If Scripture is the basis of our doctrine, sound reason is the mooring line that keeps us fastened to it. No truth claim can ever violate even a single law of reason without being utterly falsified and as the predestination of unborn babies for Hell and any concept of justice are contradictory, the Calvinist has a big problem, unless, of course, they disengage their ability to think clearly in which case anything at all can be made acceptable.
The part of the doctrine of predestination that has God, by a sovereign and eternal decree, choosing one portion of mankind to salvation while leaving the other portion to reprobation, initially strikes us as being opposed to our ideas of justice and thus needs a defense. The defense of the doctrine of reprobation rests upon mankind's original sin and total inability to save themselves.
Our ideas of justice? Since when did the definition of justice become a matter of opinion?
There is no way I'm going to let you redefine justice AMR.
God's decree finds all of mankind fallen. None have any claim on God's grace. Yet, instead of leaving all of mankind to their just punishment, God gratuitously confers undeserved happiness upon one portion of mankind (elect),—an act of pure mercy and grace to which no one can object,—while the other portion (reprobate) is simply passed by. No undeserved misery is visited upon the reprobate. No one has any right to object to this part of God's decree. If the decree dealt simply with innocent persons, it would be unjust to assign one portion to reprobation; but since the decree deals with men in a particular state, a state of guilt and sin, it is not unjust.
Any strict Calvinist (e.g., myself) must insist that while some are saved from their unbelief and disobedience, in which all are involved, and others are not, it is still the sinner's sinfulness that constitutes the ground of his reprobation. Election and reprobation proceed on different grounds; one the grace of God, the other the sin of man. It is incorrect to say that because God elects to save a man irrespective of his character or what he deserves, that therefore God elects to condemn a man irrespective of his character or what he deserves. No one has a birthright to be saved or offered salvation.
Your appeal here to original sin doesn't work because, according to Calvinism, God predestined that too. All you've done is moved the problem back a step. You said God's decree "
finds all of mankind fallen" when in fact you believe that it was God's degree that CAUSED all of mankind to fall in the first place.
So the God of Calvinism sets two men's houses on fire and saves one of them from the flames and then demands the man's gratefulness while the other man isn't saved from the flames and then is punished for having set his own house on fire and according to Calvinism neither man has anything to complain about.
Here is a summary of the proper doctrine of election as understood by any Calvinist worthy of the label :
Election is a sovereign free act of God, through which He determines who shall be made righteous.
You forgot, "...and who will not."
The elective decree was made in eternity.
Was this decree made before, after or at the same time as the decree to cause man to sin in the first place? Or was that part outside of God's sovereign conrrol?
The elective decree contemplates mankind as already fallen.
The elect are brought from a state of sin and into a state of blessedness and happiness.
You don't believe that man was created evil and in a state of sin, do you?
Election is personal determining what particular individuals shall be saved.
And by extension...
"...and those that shall not be saved."
Election includes both means and ends,—election to eternal life includes election to righteous living here in this world.
The elective decree is made effective by the efficient work of the Holy Spirit, who works when, and where, and how He pleases.
Whether just or unjust it would seem.
God's common grace would incline all men to good if not resisted.
Are you here suggesting that such resistance is outside of the providential control of God? Wheren't those who resist predestined to resist?
The elective decree leaves others who are not elected—others who suffer the just consequences of their sin.
Their sin which God predestined that they would commit - right?
Some men are permitted to follow the evil which they freely choose, to their own destruction.
FREELY CHOOSE?!
By "freely choose" you mean that they are simply unaware of God having caused them to want to sin and then to act on that desire. Is that correct?
God, in His sovereignty, could regenerate all men if He chose to do so.
Which is precisely why we can validly conclude by extension that if you haven't been predestined to salvation you have been predestined to Hell.
The Judge of all the earth will do right, and will extend His saving grace to multitudes who are undeserving.
Quite right except that your theology teaches that any action of mine was first an action of God's; that I do not and cannot do anything apart for God's sovereign decree and thus any action of mine that is punished by God would render Him a hypocrite and unjust.
Election is not based on foreseen faith or good works, but only on God's sovereign good pleasure.
As were the sins which He intends to punish in eternal Hell.
Much of the larger portion of the human race has been elected to life.
Can someone remind AMR which road was the wide one and which was the straight and narrow one again.
All of those dying in infancy are among the elect.
This is off topic but I suppose then that God having predestined all these abortions was a good thing after all.
There has also been an election of individuals and of nations to external and temporal favors and privileges—an election which falls short of salvation.
The doctrine of election is repeatedly taught and emphasized throughout the Scriptures.
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Fortunately, saying it doesn't make it so.
It really is impossible for me to comprehend how anyone can accept that the version of God that Calvinism puts forward is in any way a just God.
Lonster,
Watch this conversation closely! It will be all about the conflict between the Calvinist idea of sovereignty vs. God's righteousness and justice. The Calvinist will systematically dismantle justice, even going so far as to redefine the term so that it is synonymous, when applied to God, with the term 'arbitrary'. You just cannot have it both ways. Either God meticulously controls everything or He is just - not both. The Calvinist tries his best to have both but he has no choice but to redefine justice to make it work.
Resting in Him,
Clete