THE ATTRIBUTES OF GOD
4. THE FOREKNOWLEDGE OF GOD
What
controversies have been engendered by this subject in the past! But what
truth of Holy Scripture is there which has not been made the occasion of
theological and ecclesiastical battles? The deity of Christ, His virgin
birth, His atoning death, His second advent; the believer’s
justification, sanctification, security; the church, its organization,
officers, discipline; baptism, the Lord’s supper, and a score of other
precious truths might be mentioned. Yet, the controversies which have been
waged over them did not close the mouths of God’s faithful servants;
why, then, should we avoid the vexed question of God’s Foreknowledge,
because, forsooth, there are some who will charge us with fomenting
strife? Let others contend if they will, our duty is to bear witness
according to the light vouchsafed us.
There are two things
concerning the Foreknowledge of God about which many are in ignorance: the
meaning of the term, its Scriptural scope. Because this
ignorance is so widespread, it is an easy matter for preachers and
teachers to palm off perversions of this subject, even upon the people of
God. There is only one safeguard against error, and that is to be
established in the faith; and for that, there has to be prayerful and
diligent study, and a receiving with meekness the engrafted Word of God.
Only then are we fortified against the attacks of those who assail us.
There are those today who are misusing this very truth in order to
discredit and deny the absolute sovereignty of God in the salvation of
sinners. Just as higher critics are repudiating the Divine inspiration of
the Scriptures; evolutionists, the work of God in creation; so some pseudo
Bible teachers are perverting His foreknowledge in order to set aside His
unconditional election unto eternal life.
When the solemn and blessed
subject of Divine foreordination is expounded, when God’s eternal choice
of certain ones to be conformed to the image of His Son is set forth, the
Enemy sends along some man to argue that election is based upon the
foreknowledge of God, and this "foreknowledge" is interpreted to
mean that God foresaw certain ones would be more pliable than others, that
they would respond more readily to the strivings of the Spirit, and that
because God knew they would believe, He, accordingly, predestinated
them unto salvation. But such a statement is radically wrong. It
repudiates the truth of total depravity, for it argues that there is
something good in some men. It takes away the independency of God, for it
makes His decrees rest upon what He discovers in the creature. It
completely turns things upside down, for in saying God foresaw certain
sinners would believe in Christ, and that because of this, He
predestinated them unto salvation, is the very reverse of the truth.
Scripture affirms that God, in His high sovereignty, singled out certain
ones to be recipients of His distinguishing favors (Acts 13:48), and
therefore He determined to bestow upon them the gift of faith. False
theology makes God’s foreknowledge of our believing the cause of
His election to salvation; whereas, God’s election is the cause, and our
believing in Christ is the effect.
Ere proceeding further with
our discussion of this much misunderstood theme, let us pause and define
our terms. What is meant by "foreknowledge?" "To know
beforehand," is the ready reply of many. But we must not jump at
conclusions, nor must we turn to Webster’s dictionary as the final court
of appeal, for it is not a matter of the etymology of the term employed.
What is needed is to find out how the word is used in Scripture.
The Holy Spirit’s usage of an expression always defines its meaning and
scope. It is failure to apply this simple, rule which is responsible for
so much confusion and error. So many people assume they already know the
signification of a certain word used in Scripture, and then they are too
dilatory to test their assumptions by means of a concordance. Let
us amplify this point.
Take the word
"flesh." Its meaning appears to be so obvious that many would
regard it as a waste of time to look up its various connections in
Scripture. It is hastily assumed that the word is synonymous with the
physical body, and so no inquiry is made. But, in fact, "flesh"
in Scripture frequently includes far more than what is corporeal; all that
is embraced by the term can only be ascertained by a diligent comparison
of every occurrence of it and by a study of each separate context.
Take the word "world." The average reader of the Bible imagines
this word is the equivalent for the human race, and consequently, many
passages where the term is found are wrongly interpreted. Take the word
immortality. Surely it requires no study! Obviously it has reference to
the indestructibility of the soul. Ah, my reader, it is foolish and wrong
to assume anything where the Word of God is concerned. If the reader will
take the trouble to carefully examine each passage where
"mortal" and "immortal" are found, it will be seen
these words are never applied to the soul, but always to the body.
Now what has just been said
on "flesh," the "world," immortality, applies with
equal force to the terms know and "foreknow." Instead of
imagining that these words signify no more than a simple cognition, the
different passages in which they occur require to be carefully weighed.
The word "foreknowledge" is not found in the Old Testament. But
know occurs there frequently. When that term is used in connection with
God, it often signifies to regard with favour, denoting not mere
cognition but an affection for the object in view. "I know
thee by name" (Ex. 33:17). "Ye have been rebellious against the
Lord from the day that I knew you" (Deut. 9:24). "Before
I formed thee in the belly I knew thee" (Jer. 1:5). "They
have made princes and I knew it not" (Hos. 8:4).
"You only have I known of all the families of the earth" (Amos
3:2). In these passages knew signifies either loved or appointed.
In like manner, the word
"know" is frequently used in the New Testament, in the same
sense as in the Old Testament. "Then will I profess unto them, I never
knew you" (Matt. 7:23). "I am the good shepherd and know
My sheep and am known of Mine" (John 10:14). "If any man
love God, the same is known of Him" (1 Cor. 8:3). "The
Lord knoweth them that are His" (2 Tim. 2:19).
Now the word
"foreknowledge" as it is used in the New Testament is less
ambiguous than in its simple form "to know." If every passage in
which it occurs is carefully studied, it will be discovered that it is a
moot point whether it ever has reference to the mere perception of events
which are yet to take place. The fact is that "foreknowledge" is
never used in Scripture in connection with events or actions;
instead, it always has reference to persons. It is persons God is
said to "foreknow," not the actions of those persons. In proof
of this we shall now quote each passage where this expression is found.
The first occurrence is in
Acts 2:23. There we read, "Him being delivered by the determinate
counsel and foreknowledge of God, ye have taken, and by wicked hands have
crucified and slain." If careful attention is paid to the wording of
this verse it will be seen that the apostle was not there speaking of God’s
foreknowledge of the act of the crucifixion, but of the Person
crucified: "Him (Christ) being delivered by," etc.
The second occurrence is in
Romans 8;29,30. "For whom He did foreknow, He also did
predestinate to be conformed to the image, of His Son, that He might be
the Firstborn among many brethren. Moreover whom He did
predestinate, them He also called," etc. Weigh well the pronoun that
is used here. It is not what He did foreknow, but whom He
did. It is not the surrendering of their wills nor the believing of their
hearts but the persons themselves, which is here in view.
"God hath not cast
away His people which He foreknew" (Rom. 11:2). Once more the plain
reference is to persons, and to persons only.
The last mention is in 1
Peter 1:2: "Elect according to the foreknowledge of God the
Father." Who are elect according to the foreknowledge of God
the Father? The previous verse tells us: the reference is to the
"strangers scattered" i.e. the Diaspora, the Dispersion, the
believing Jews. Thus, here too the reference is to persons, and not to
their foreseen acts.
Now in view of these
passages (and there are no more) what scriptural ground is there
for anyone saying God "foreknew" the acts of certain ones, viz.,
their "repenting and believing," and that because of those acts
He elected them unto salvation? The answer is, None whatever. Scripture never
speaks of repentance and faith as being foreseen or foreknown by God.
Truly, He did know from all eternity that certain ones would
repent and believe, yet this is not what Scripture refers to as the object
of God’s "foreknowledge." The word uniformly refers to God’s
foreknowing persons; then let us "hold fast the form of sound
words" (2 Tim. 1:13).
Another thing to which we
desire to call particular attention is that the first two passages quoted
above show plainly and teach implicitly that God’s
"foreknowledge" is not causative, that instead, something
else lies behind, precedes it, and that something is His own sovereign
decree. Christ was "delivered by the (1) determinate counsel
and (2) foreknowledge of God." (Acts 2:23). His "counsel"
or decree was the ground of His foreknowledge. So again in Romans 8:29.
That verse opens with the word "for," which tells us to look
back to what immediately precedes. What, then, does the previous verse
say? This, "all things work together for good to them. . . .who are
the called according to His purpose." Thus God’s foreknowledge is based
upon His purpose or decree (see Ps. 2:7).
God foreknows what will
be because He has decreed what shall be. It is therefore a
reversing of the order of Scripture, a putting of the cart before the
horse, to affirm that God elects because He foreknows people. The truth
is, He "foreknows" because He has elected. This removes
the ground or cause of election from outside the creature, and places it
in God’s own sovereign will. God purposed in Himself to elect a certain
people, not because of anything good in them or from them, either actual
or foreseen, but solely out of His own mere pleasure. As to why He
chose the ones He did, we do not know, and can only say, "Even so,
Father, for so it seemed good in Thy sight." The plain truth
of Romans 8:29 is that God, before the foundation of the world, singled
out certain sinners and appointed them unto salvation (2 Thess. 2:13).
This is clear from the concluding words of the verse: "Predestinated
to be conformed to the image of His Son," etc. God did not
predestinate those whom He foreknew were "conformed,"
but, on the contrary, those whom He "foreknew" (i.e., loved and
elected) He predestinated to be conformed. Their conformity to
Christ is not the cause, but the effect of God’s foreknowledge and
predestination.
God did not elect any
sinner because He foresaw that he would believe, for the simple but
sufficient reason that no sinner ever does believe until God gives
him faith; just as no man sees until God gives him sight. Sight is God’s
gift, seeing is the consequence of my using His gift. So faith is God’s
gift (Eph. 1:8,9), believing is the consequence of my using His gift. If
it were true that God had elected certain ones to be saved because
in due time they would believe, then that would make believing a meritorious
act, and in that event the saved sinner would have ground for
"boasting," which Scripture emphatically denies: Ephesians 2:9.
Surely God’s Word is
plain enough in teaching that believing is not a meritorious act. It
affirms that Christians are a people "who have believed through
grace" (Acts 18:27). If then, they have believed "through
grace," there is absolutely nothing meritorious about
"believing," and if nothing meritorious, it could not be the
ground or cause which moved God to choose them. No; God’s choice
proceeds not from anything in us, or anything from us, but solely from His
own sovereign pleasure. Once more, in Romans 11:5, we read of "a
remnant according to the election of grace." There it is, plain
enough; election itself is of grace, and grace is unmerited
favour something for which we had no claim upon God whatsoever.
It thus appears that it is
highly important for us to have clear and scriptural views of the
"foreknowledge" of God. Erroneous conceptions about it lead
inevitably to thoughts most dishonoring to Him. The popular idea of Divine
foreknowledge is altogether inadequate. God not only knew the end from the
beginning, but He planned, fixed, predestinated everything from the
beginning. And, as cause stands to effect, so God’s purpose is the
ground of His prescience. If then the reader be a real Christian, he is so
because God chose him in Christ before the foundation of the world (Eph.
1:4), and chose not because He foresaw you would believe, but chose
simply because it pleased Him to choose: chose you notwithstanding your
natural unbelief. This being so, all the glory and praise belongs alone to
Him. You have no ground for taking any credit to yourself. You have
"believed through grace" (Acts 18:27), and that,
because your very election was "of grace" (Rom. 11:5).