providence

+ New
← All notes·providence
★ Romans 8:28–30

Foreknown, Called, Glorified — Romans 8:28-30

Rom 8:28-30 links five acts of God: foreknew, predestined, called, justified, glorified. Each verb is aorist, including "glorified," so certain is the outcome that Paul speaks of it as already done. Augustine grounded predestination in God's prevenient grace, and Aquinas treated it as God's eternal ordering of the elect to glory, fully compatible with human freedom. Calvin read this chain as the ground of assurance, not anxiety. The traditions differ on how predestination and free cooperation fit together, yet share its comfort — that God works all things for good (8:28) — grounded in the sovereignty unfolded in Rom 9:6-18. Glorification ties this note to the resurrection hope of 1Cor 15:42-44 and to the conformity to Christ's image promised in Rom 8:29. Bavinck treats the ordo salutis as the temporal unfolding of God's eternal purpose.

soteriologyprovidencepredestinationromans
★ John 10:27–30

The Security of Christ's Flock — John 10:27-30

Jesus grounds the security of his people in his own grip: John 10:27-30, "no one will snatch them out of my hand... and no one is able to snatch them out of the Father's hand." Their safety rests on divine power. How this keeping meets human freedom is debated. Augustine spoke of perseverance itself as a gift of grace; the Reformed tradition drew from it the final perseverance of the elect; Trent taught a firm hope while warning against presumptuous certainty, since believers can still fall and must persevere in grace. Edwards located the marks of true grace in persevering love. All confess that whoever is finally saved is kept by God, not by their own strength. The shepherd imagery connects to Ps 23:1 and to the calling of Rom 8:30. What God begins, he is faithful to complete.

soteriologyprovidencegracejohn
★ Ephesians 1:3–14

The Sovereignty of God in Election — Ephesians 1:3-14

Eph 1:3-14 is one long sentence of praise: God "chose us in him before the foundation of the world," "predestined us for adoption," and works "all things according to the counsel of his will." Election is "to the praise of his glory." Calvin read this doxology as the warrant for the doctrine of predestination, and Augustine grounded adoption in unmerited grace. Barth reoriented the whole around election in Christ, 'in him' being the key phrase. The phrase "the counsel of his will" connects to the potter's freedom in Rom 9:18-21 and to the calling of Rom 8:29-30. Sovereign grace and assured glory are two ends of one purpose.

theology-propersovereigntyelectionpredestination