No I don't. Why would you say that?
Because the text says nothing whatsoever regarding God foreknowing
that they would choose Him. The object of God's foreknowledge in your assertion is the fact of their future choosing. The objects of God's foreknowledge
in the text are individuals, the "whom(s)" of the passage.
StanJ said:
I'm not talking from a doctrinal perspective, I'm talking from an exegetical perspective, and what Paul says in Rom 8:28-30.
OK, so, exegetically speaking then, where in Romans 8 does it say that God foreknew
that they would choose Him?
Please show me the verses where it says precisely that.
Or anywhere in the bible really where it says specifically that God chooses based on His knowing of what they would do. Can you show me, chapter and verse, where it says that?
StanJ said:
Are you purporting that the translators of the NIV got the rendering wrong?
No, though I think the NIV has some flaws as a translation that leans toward dynamic equivalency rather than formal equivalency.
But in Romans 8:28-30 its an ok translation as long as as you allow Foreknow to be defined by its original Greek lexical meaning rather than imposing an English understanding of the word, which is what you appear to be doing.
StanJ said:
προγινώσκω (proginōskō), connotes ONLY foreknowledge, what WILL happen based on the indivdual's choice, NOT choosing or ordaining what an individual will do.
First, I don't argue that προγινώσκω refers to God's choosing
what an individual
will do, I argue it refers to God's choosing of
an individual.
That is much more in keeping with the grammar of the passage which tells about
whom God chose not some supposed criteria about how God chose which goes totally unmentioned by Paul in the passage up for discussion.
Second, your argument that προγινώσκω "ONLY connotes what will happen based on an individual's choice" is
absolutely reading a doctrinal presupposition into the text and it does so at the expense of sound lexical research on the word προγινώσκω.
Look it up in
any Greek-English Lexicon and you will find something like what BDAG has as a definition.
BDAG's definition of προγινώσκω:
BDAG said:
1. to know beforehand or in advance, have foreknowledge (of) ti, someth. (Philo, Somn. 1, 2; Jos., Vi. 106; Tat. 8, 4) affliction Hs 7:5. Abs. (Jos., Ant. 2, 86) proginw,skontej since you know this (i.e. what the context makes clear) in advance 2 Pt 3:17. Of God (Alex. Aphr., An. p. 1, 7 Br. ta. me,llonta, Fat. 30 p. 200, 29; Just.) pa,nta Hm 4, 3, 4.—Closely connected is the idea of choice that suggests foreknowledge
2. choose beforehand tina, someone Ro 8:29. to.n lao.n auvtou/ 11:2 (EWeber, D. Problem der Heilsgesch. nach Ro 9-11, 1911; THoppe, D. Idee d. Heilsgesch. b. Pls 1926; FMaier, Israel in d. Heilsgesch. nach Ro 9-11, 1929; EvDobschütz, Prädestination: StKr 106, ’35, 9-19; JMunck, Christus u. Israel: Ro 9-11, ’56; EDinkler, Prädestination bei Paulus, GDehn Festschr., ’57, 61-102; s. also on proori,zw). Pass. of Christ proegnwsme,noj pro. katabolh/j ko,smou 1 Pt 1:20.—Know from time past (Jos., Bell. 6, 8) proginw,skonte,j me a;nwqen Ac 26:5.—DELG s.v. gignw,skw. M-M. TW.
BDAG shows that definition 2 is not only possible but likely in Romans 8:29 as they list Romans 8:29 as an example of def. 2.
Furthermore, your statement that προγινώσκω
only refers to God choosing based on what He knows someone will do is disproved by its usage in 1 Peter 1:20 referring to Christ being
chosen (προγινώσκω) before the creation of the world and by Romans 11:2 where God's choosing of Israel is clearly in view.
Your turn,do you think the NIV has προγινώσκω wrong in 1 Peter 1:20?
StanJ said:
That His foreknowledge enables God to predestine those He knows will choose His son, does not mean His foreknowledge is causal in ANY way.
Except that 1 Peter 1:20 disproves your attempt to limit the definition of προγινώσκω.
StanJ said:
There is an order in these verses, and none of them cause the next, they result in the next.
I'm glad you agree. Incidentally this statement dismantles Arminianism as Arminians actually do believe that God's foreknowledge of the future actions of an individual
causes God to predestine them. If you have God actively foreknowing (in the sense of intimately choosing) then God's sovereign will is the cause and you are back to Calvinism.
We Calvinists can see both the order in the passage and the fact that God is the cause, starting the chain through choosing/foreknowing (προγινώσκω).
God's choosing/foreknowing results in God's predestination. God's predestination results in God's calling. God's calling results in God's justifying and God's justifying results in God's glorifying.
Maybe
you can tell Jerry that, he doesn't appear to want to hear it from me.
All you have to do is to rethink your erroneous conclusion regarding προγινώσκω.
StanJ said:
Foreknowledge in THIS context, does NOT imply knowing as in intimate carnal knowledge, or knowing as in intimate mental knowledge.
The word προγινώσκω in this context implies choosing as just as it does in 1 Peter 1:20, and more immediately in Romans 11:2.