Foreknowledge

For God knew his people in advance, and he chose them to become like his Son, so that his Son would be the firstborn among many brothers and sisters. Romans 8:29 New Living Translation

In advance – Read it carefully. The NLT is the only contemporary translation that I know that clearly implies God knows beforehand each of the ones who will be chosen by Him. All the other translations use the word “foreknew,” a word that is ambiguous with regard to the actual individuals. The Greek is equally ambiguous. Proginosko literally means “to know beforehand,” but it allows the subject of what is known to remain obscure. Does God know each and every one before they come to the Kingdom or does He know that each one who comes to the Kingdom will be conformed? The question may not be answered from this text alone, but it seems to me that the Bible is quite clear about the answer. And the answer is not theologically comfortable.

“The Hebrew Bible . . . represents a radically different type of narrative. The human characters, all the more so God himself, are complex. There is nothing predicable about their responses to situations. . . The unfolding of events has become suddenly uncertain, dependent as it is not on the blind clash of opposed forces but on emotion, attitude, choice, will. . . time as the arena of free agents responding to one another in freedom [means] you do not know, cannot know, how it will end.”[1]

Pagan thinking sees the world as a sequence of the “iron chain of causality.” Pagan worlds view Man as the victim of opposing good and evil forces. In pagan theology, it is all known beforehand. All that is left is to play out the parts on the predetermined stage. “God knows” becomes the worst kind of fatalism for if God knows it all, then what occurs is the inevitable consequence of divine determination and we are nothing more than puppets in a hideous parody. When translators of the Bible imply this kind of divine foreknowledge, they are spouting pagan idolatry. The whole course of biblical history says otherwise. All agents are free—and culpable. What I do matters—and it changes the direction of the universe. The end cannot be known because the free will of moral agents is not perfectly predicable.

When Paul writes about proginosko he is not Plato or Parmenides. When he uses the Greek verb proorizo (predestine), he is not Aquinas, Luther or Calvin. God’s knowing does not entail my doing because my doing cannot be known before it is done. I am free. God made me that way in spite of the complexity and confusion that creates. Oh, we long to think it is all planned ahead of time. But we long so because we do not want to carry the weight of responsibility. We want a cosmic excuse for our actions. God will not give it to us. Choose! And live with it.

“In [Greek] tragedy nothing is in doubt and everyone’s destiny is known. That makes for tranquility. There is a sort of fellow-feeling among characters in a tragedy: he who kills is as innocent as he who gets killed: it’s all a matter of what part you are playing. Tragedy is restful; and the reason is that hope, that foul, deceitful thing, has no part in it.”[2]

Topical Index: time, foreknowledge, predestination, proginosko, Romans 8:29

[1] Jonathan Sacks, To Heal a Fractured World, p. 176.o

[2] Jean Anouilh, Antigone, cited in Jonathan Sacks, To Heal a Fractured World, p. 178.

If you are interested in a full analysis of the issue of foreknowledge, time and choice, please see my book, God, Time and the Limits of Omniscience.

A FURTHER NOTE ON “Who Is God?” published on September 9.

Judi Baldwin prompted me to add this:

God is author of both good and evil, but that does not mean He executes both. What I mean is that as absolute sovereign, He could do whatever He desires, but what He desires and does is good, not evil. To suggest that God cannot do evil is to remove His free will. To say that He can but chooses not to is to honor Him as eternally faithful BY CHOICE, not by abstract attribute.

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robert lafoy

A good example.
“And they answered the angel of the LORD that stood among the myrtle trees, and said, We have walked to and fro through the earth, and, behold, all the earth sitteth still, and is at rest.”(Zech. 1:11)
Interestingly, the word rest isn’t shabot but rather shaqat which is a rest having to do with being “on course.” If you read the passage, the “horns” are the ones who have oppressed the people of the land of Judah and they are crushing them. In other words, “it’s my way or else.”
“Things are well, everythings going exactly according to plan. The puppets are dancing just as we desire!!
God’s solution. 4 fruitful craftsmen to fray (scatter) them.

“Let us make them according to our image”………

Greek tragedy sounds more like antichrist (ism) 🙂 to me!!

YHWH bless you and keep you…….

Thomas Elsinger

According to my dear niece, who attends a Reformed Baptist church, one of the most important doctrines in the Bible is that of predestination. God already has determined which humans are going to heaven and which are going to hell. Humans have no choice in the matter. To me, this is unacceptable thinking. I’d like to have some solid scriptural reasoning to use to back up my opinion when discussing this issue with my niece. Anyone have some ideas that would help me?

robert lafoy

Hi Thomas, it might seem overly simplistic, but go back to the garden. Adam, Eve and the tree(s). It would seem that it all has to do with choice, just as God had a “choice” to initiate this whole thing. The whole of the paradigm regarding the human condition is encapsulated there.
As a side (?) note. Just because God choses to “drive” His creation to a particular conclusion doesn’t mean it should be equated to predestination in the sense that it is commonly used.

YHWH bless you and keep you……..

carl roberts

What is known by God (the future) is not known by man unless God chooses to reveal it. We do, however, (partially) know our future by God’s dealings with us in the past. We are not totally blind to the future but “hope” (live with confident expectation) in the goodness of – the mercies of – and the Sovereignty of God. This hope (confident expectation) we have is based upon a Book- one that is written by men who were inspired by God. ~ Comfort (strengthen, encourage) one another with these (His) words! ~
If there is one thing I know.. – it is that I don’t know! But I do know the One “who knows,” and He is good! (all the time!)- And all the time- He is good! How does “any man” know this? ~ It is written: “For the LORD is good (!) His mercies are everlasting, and HIs truth endures to all generations.”
Shall we continue? ~ Therefore we do not lose heart, but though our outer man is decaying, yet our inner man is being renewed day by day. For (because) our momentary, light affliction is producing for us an eternal weight of glory far beyond all comparison..He gives strength to the weary and increases the power of the weak.
Shall we continue? – Those who hope in the LORD will renew their strength. They will soar on wings like eagles; they will run and not grow weary, they will walk and not be faint ~

In Christ alone
I place my trust
And find my glory in the power of the cross
In every victory
Let it be said of me
My source of strength
My source of hope

Is Christ alone!

~Trust in the LORD with all your heart and do not lean on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge Him, and He will make your paths straight.. ~

Pat

Great message Carl!!! I trust God and God alone. He has never let me down even if it looked like HE did. I trust in HIM and HE does guide my paths. Of course I have to do my part, put one foot in front of the other.

laurita hayes

Surely, if predestination means to God what we seem to THINK it means to us, then I think the gift of free will is either a farce on a magnitude far greater than the greatest of those Greek tragedies, or it is a hoax on a magnitude far greater than that of anything we can imagine.

The Law becomes just something to make a laughing stock of us, as it is meaningless in a world where there is no free will to follow it or not. The cross is meaningless, for the Example Who died on it did not show us anything we can use. Nor did it ‘fix’ anything. If there is no free will, then He was forced to the Cross, but if predestination is true, then we cannot choose to follow Him. The Garden Tree was just a joke, and sin becomes just something that God does TO US, not something that we do to HIM! Think about it. Etc, etc., ad nauseum. I can sit here all day and pontificate nonsense on this line til the cows come home. In fact, if predestination is so, that entire Book becomes ridiculous, because without free will, nothing in it makes sense. Skip is so right! Predestination is PAGAN, through and through. No wonder so many of the most beautiful things in the Word so often seems to make no sense to someone who is having to read it through these lenses!

If we think God knows the ‘future’, then we are automatically putting Him on a time line, are we not? But if He created time, like a painter drawing a line for us on a piece of paper to follow, then can He not see that line? But, here is the inexplicable beauty of Him for me. The One Who made the line put Himself on it. He became part of the dance, part of the drawing of the line. I choose, then He aligns Himself with my choice. Then I align myself (well, I’m trying!) with His alignment, then He does the same again. My faith creates my reality, and when it lines up with His faith (that Love is true), then my reality is at rest (completed) with the ultimate Win. I share in the final triumph of Love. I cannot be part of the play if I have no free will. I am just furniture without it. Love is going to win, that is already a done deal, and that is something we can know along with Him, but He still is dancing with us as long as we will dance with Him. The dance is shaped moment by moment on both sides. Yes, the Book of Life is being written and we are being judged out of it ahead of time, which we know because we are told that when He returns He is bringing His reward with Him, and in that sense He will have knowledge of our destiny before we do, but in our individual lives, well, perhaps He does not work out that judgment until all the evidence is in.

laurita hayes

Thank you for your kindness and attention, Skip. Well, repeating the party line about the time line was a little tongue in cheek and I would LOVE to read the book but it is going to have to wait a while. Until then, I am reading as fast as I can go of the TW’s and am trying to somehow glean your understanding of time from the little bits I am finding. Until then, I hope you write some more of this! I sure don’t want to spread the confusion any further, and am trying to get my own down too!

Mark Randall, when I went to wrap my head around the choice thing, I looked at my life and concluded that, for now, one of the working definitions of sin that I am going to sit with for a while more is: “SIN: a choice that limits further choices in that direction”. It is possible to choose all your choices away: I have seen people do just that, and go right on over the edge. I have skated pretty close, myself. Sin is the choice that binds. Binds what? Future choices. When I sin I put myself under the control of another master, and he drives a cruel ship. A ship of force. Mercy is what restores those choices back to me when I have chosen it away. The Law creates a hedge of safety within which I can choose 360 degrees. In 1Cor, 6:12 Paul said that all things were lawful (there for him to choose) for him, but not all were expedient. I think the ones that weren’t “expedient” were in the class that would BRING HIM UNDER THEIR POWER (last part of the verse). He obviously wanted to keep all his probable choices intact, thank you very much!

I think Pharaoh was limited in his choices to the exact extent that he was choosing choices that put him under future force. He eventually ran out of all other options, and over his cliff he went, too. What was the force that bound him? I think God in His mercy (and I am starting to skate on thin ice here, but my understanding hovers around here right now) created the curses, along with cause and effect, as a way to slow us down and make us think before we just mash the gas pedal to the floor and vaporize! It gets real heavy the more you sin. That is mercy. I know steel hardens when it is under conditions that directly confront its ‘steelness’, so to speak. I sometimes think a crucible is like the Cross in that sin is called out to its very essence and required to show its bluff. It is one thing to talk about the principal: it is quite another to have him overhear you! I think YHVH overheard Pharaoh and told him to put up his dukes… Still working on this one.

Mark Randall

Thank you Laurita. I have nothing but the upmost respect for your opinion. Nor am I saying I’m right or have this figured out.

I definitely have my own personal opinions on free will and personal choices. On my example of Pharaoh though, I’m trying to set my opinion aside and just take the text for what I read it to say. In Ex 9:12 we see Adonai harden his heart and then in Ex. 9:16 But for this purpose I have raised you up… So, I’m just not seeing any wiggle room for Pharaoh having free will or free choices to be able to make. Which goes to my conclusion of the last post I made, “We really fight tooth and nail against anyone or anything that tries to come against our “freedom of choice”. Including against the One that makes the “choice” as to whether or not we even get a chance to make choices. He is the One that opens and closes eyes and hearts. Therefore He is the one that decides whether or not we ever get those moments of “free will”.”

Hope you had the freedom to obey the commandment to rejoice during this awesome feast of Sukkot. Blessings to you and your home.

Marilyn Lehmann

I believe that with Pharoah God could and would accomplish his purpose. We all know that Pharoah chose not to let God’s people go. So God in His divine judgement did what He had to do to free His people and all the then known world and now saw that God alone is God and He is more than able to accomplish His purpose.
On the other hand Pharoah had every opportunity to choose to repent and follow God. The whole then known worl and now would also have seen that He is God and there is no other. Either way God would prove who He is. God gave Pharoah free choice to follow or reject him. Pharoah made his own decision & chose to reject Him.
We are not puppets but we are free willed children of God who loves us all and is not willing that any should perish…we make the decision to live or to die by the choices we make!

Mark Randall

Thanks for your comments Skip. I have a enormous amount of respect and appreciation for what you pour so much love and effort into.

So, when you say “Hebrew thought views time as a series of choices with undetermined results.”. Exactly where is that coming from and from whom? Are we talking about Hebrew thought from a modern Rabbinic(post 800CE) perspective? Or is that something the text is telling us prior to them? Obviously, Hebrew thought is curricular while Greek is linear but, that isn’t the same thing as what your describing above.

And also when you say “Therefore, each choice determines the subsequent choices and direction of the universe. Free will means the ability to ALTER the course of subsequent events and choices.”. Are you then implying that God must wait for us to make decisions before He can act, therefore making it us and our choices that determine the end from the beginning, rather then He Himself as the Sovereign King of the universe? And could we not liken that to us, the clay, telling the potter, the one who decides what will be formed in the clay without asking or waiting for the clay to make a choice, what He can or can’t do with it? I just am not seeing that perspective in scripture. I’m not sure I’ve ever read or heard anything, other then modern Rabbinical, that would delve into our choices being able to alter or change the ultimate decisions that Adonai will make or has already made.

Clearly we have choices and decisions to make that impact the current as well as the future. But, not in any kind of way that would impede on what He has already purposed. I mean how could we, or in any kind of Hebraic understanding for that matter, think that us, as finite and narrow minded and limited in our ability to see further then we can throw a rock, as we clearly are, be the factors that will ultimately determine what the Creator of heaven and earth will be able to do or not do? I just am having a hard time thinking we have that kind of power over the one that formed us, the universe and everything in it.

Mark Randall

I really don’t think we can just pull out verse 29 from context but, if we want to then, okay.

What does it mean that God “foreknew” people?
– the word “foreknew” is based upon the common Greek word (ginōskō), “to know.”
– In Semitic or Hebrew culture, to “know” someone means to have covenant relationship with them.
– To “foreknow” means to enact a covenant relationship in advance.

“Know” = Covenant Relationship

Now Adam knew Eve his wife, and she conceived and bore Cain, saying, “I have gotten a man with the help of Adonai.” (Gen 4:1, ESV)

“For I have chosen him [literally “known him”], so that he may command his children and his household after him to keep the way of Adonai by doing righteousness and justice, so that Adonai may bring upon Abraham what He has spoken about him.” (Gen 18:19)

“They will not teach again, each man his neighbor and each man his brother, saying, ‘Know Adonai,’ for they will all know Me, from the least of them to the greatest of them,” declares Adonai, “for I will forgive their iniquity, and their sin I will remember no more.” (Jer 31:34)

You only have I chosen [literally “known”] among all the families of the earth; Therefore, I will punish you for all your iniquities. (Amos 3:2)

In other words. “those whom He foreknew” means:
– that from all eternity God set His love upon those whom He would save.
– that from all eternity God committed Himself to save those He had chosen from every nation, tribe, family, and language.
– that God committed Himself in covenant to those whom He would give eternal life.

Those whom He foreknew: God’s covenant commitment to save those upon whom He has set His love.
Predestined to become conformed to the image of His Son: the pre-ordained means by which God saves those whom He has chosen; pre-arranging all things to work together to bring about conformity to Yeshua in the lives of the elect.
The salvation of the elect is not primarily for their own comfort or safety, but for the glory of Yeshua.
Yeshua as firstborn:
– having the pre-eminence; an exalted position
– unique; the first among many
– Our being conformed to the image of Yeshua is the primary means by which we give Him glory.

I think we really need to at least include verse 30 as well.

Romans 8:30
and these whom He predestined, He also called; and these whom He called, He also justified; and these whom He justified, He also glorified.

“these … He also called”:
– This is the effectual call of God through the work of His Ruach, opening the heart of the elect to receive the Gospel and believe in Yeshua.
– All who are called in this manner respond positively.

“these … He also justified”:
– Through the work of the Ruach, the elect respond positively to the Gospel, repenting of their sin and exercising faith in Yeshua.
– As such, they are justified before God, i.e., they are declared to be righteous by God Himself.

“these … He also glorified”:
– To be glorified means to be resurrected to eternal life; to have gained immortality, never again to be confronted with death or dying.
– That Paul states this in past tense (aorist) means that our glorification, though future, is as sure as if it had already taken place.

God is not a man, that He should lie, Nor a son of man, that He should repent; Has He said, and will He not do it? Or has He spoken, and will He not make it good?
(Num 23:19)
For as many as are the promises of God, in Him they are yes; therefore also through Him is our Amen to the glory of God through us.
(2Cor 1:20)
Many of the above notes are from our Romans study we’ve been doing for the last 3 years.
Note: I forgot to add the following on the word “foreknow”. “proegnō” (προεγνω) is the aorist form of proginōskō (προγινωσκω). Proginōskō has the root ginōskō, “to know,” and the prefix pro means “before.” Thus, “to know before,” or in older English, “to foreknow.”

Mark Randall

I absolutely don’t conclude or admit that I have even half a clue on this whole Idea of “free will”.

However, if we really think for one second that we have this unalienable right to just do as we want, choose as we feel like, make any all decision’s apart from or in despite of what God says “IS” or “WILL” be, then we really have a ton of scripture to fight against. On top of the fact that this notion of total free will and choice would inevitably mean that God has to wait to see what we’ll do before He can decide what He will or can do. And that’s completely ridiculous from how I read scripture.

Here’s a real simple example. How are we going to deal with Pharaoh’s “right to choose”? Did he actually have a “free will” or the ability to make a “choice”? Because if we think that, then we call God a liar. Paul seems to conclude the same thing in Rom 9. Does the clay bowl get to tell the potter how to make it or what it chooses to be used for? That’s almost comical. And we can’t say, “Well that’s a bowl and we’re people”, because Paul is relating that clay to “us” as people.

So, I’m just saying, even if we “decide” that Calvin’s all wrong, which would be arrogant and incorrect, on the total and complete sovereignty of the Creator of heaven and earth, it isn’t going to change the reality that we just simply don’t get to choose to do anything we want or that God has to wait to see what we’ll do before He’s given permission by our “free will” do decide for Himself what He can or can’t do.

I also think that this is just so totally a US of A concept to begin with. We really fight tooth and nail against anyone or anything that tries to come against our “freedom of choice”. Including against the One that makes the “choice” as to whether or not we even get a chance to make choices. He is the One that opens and closes eyes and hearts. Therefore He is the one that decides whether or not we ever get those moments of “free will”.

laurita hayes

Thank you each and every one of you so very much for all of the above! I don’t think we blindly get in our car of life and shove God around with our choices, either. He created all the parameters and outcomes in advance. Surely He knows IN ADVANCE what the results of all the choices would ultimately result in, but perhaps that is not the same thing as ‘knowing’ WHAT we are actually going to choose?

I appreciate Daniel Kraemer’s thought to balance this. I think what he is describing is something along the lines of what I was trying to describe, too. I am a culmination of all the previous choices before me. The reason I have a hard time with birthdays is because of incidents in childhood. The reason I have congenital defects is because of situations created by choices my for-parents were involved in. My emotions are a super-crunch of all the above and more. And, yes, a large part, a much larger part than people may THINK we have, is available to me to re-choose. BUT, I have to want to. What I truly WANT seems to be the most important criteria. Then it seems, the Good Lord shows up and says “How hard are you willing to work and how much are you willing to change?” and most people are just going to say “Oh, never mind; I must have dialed the wrong number!”

If I want good health, then I must be willing to re-examine all the choices, and be willing to re-choose a whole bunch of them -including what I may hate or fear. If I run into emotions or mindsets that are not of God, then I must become willing to take responsibility for them and repent them and ask to have them replaced. Then, and only then, is a greater range of choice freed up, or RETURNED, to me. I am firmly convinced that to back out of the wrong choices of my ancestors is my assignment; to take responsibility on MY generation for that iniquity that went down on their clock is not only my privilege, but my RESPONSIBILITY. The precedent for that is the one I see in Nehemiah where the people got together and took responsibility for the sins of their fathers. They did not REPENT for those sins; they CONFESSED, or ackowledged before YHVH, RESPONSIBILITY before Him for them, and when they did, I noticed the range of choices for them as a nation was returned to them. They got back out of slavery and subjection and out from under FORCE again. When I decided to go try the same, all kinds of amazing differences started to show up in my life! Things that were impossible are now possible; mindsets that were stuck no matter what I did, disappeared, and even body ailments, even things like bone alignment, have changed.

Yes, I think we find ourselves seemingly stuck in a personal world, and even a corporate world in our families and community, where our Choice Button does not seem to activate, but if I think on myself as the present REPRESENTATIVE of the culmination of all those choices, then I can go find the re-set button. Where I see a diminishing of the blessings, including the blessing of ‘free’ choice (and yes, Daniel, is most certainly does cost!) then I am beginning to be suspicious that I might should be getting before the throne and asking what I need to do to get the record straight and get that captivity on my generations or in my life reversed. I now see myself as part of the community that came BEFORE me, too. If it could affect me by its choices, then perhaps, likewise, I can affect the outcome of those choices back again, so that my FUTURE generations can breathe freer. Time and again, when I have gone back and got something straight that has obviously been the family dynamic for generations before YHVH, my children have come to me, and even have said “I don’t know what you did, but thank you”. They knew where the oppression was originating from!

I know I sure don’t know a lot, but these days, my suspicions are getting pretty healthy! I don’t just sit there and assume that if I find myself stuck that i just have to stay that way. If the Truth does set me free, then I want to pursue it, and get myself back within the borders so that I am free to worship my God with a free spirit and in the full truth, including the truth of the mess that I am responsible for bringing before the Throne to get resolved! So help me, YHVH!

Pat

Wow!!! Thank you so much all of you and especially you Laurita. I am fairly new here and I am learning a lot from all your insights and discussions. As in everything in my walk I go directly to my Abba and discuss it all with HIM. Whenever I learn something new and have questions I go directly to HIM and to HIS word. HE lovingly leads me to the truth. HIS truth not man’s. I was involved with a group of people that became very legalistic and knew in my heart that I was not supposed to be there. I kept going because they all truly loved Yeshua and my best friend was there and he really loved them. Well let me tell you at least in my life if YHVH does not want me to be somewhere or with someone HE shuts the door and in this case it was brutal. My best friend stopped talking to me and once again it was just me and Yeshua. It was the best place for me to be. My relationship with HIM is much stronger and more intimate than it ever was. He even restored my relationship with my best friend and opened his eyes to what Abba wanted him to see. Now our relationship is stronger than ever and we are learning and walking with Abba together. Our walk is love but also truth without being legalistic. Skip l love your daily word and am learning so much. Looking forward to seeing you in November in VA.

Meta Williams

I am grateful for this clarification (about foreknowledge); I believed that the accepted view was mistaken, but struggled to explain why.

Mark Randall

Hello Skip.
After some careful thought on the issue of whether or not it was God that hardened Pharaoh’s heart or actually a “choice” of freewill, or lack thereof, made by Pharaoh, and since I think this is a great subject matter to consider, I figured I would put some more effort into it. What really troubled me was your reply to me that somehow God has to “wait” for us to make our “freewill choice” before He’s able to act. That just goes against what I read in the text about a sovereign God and specifically what we read here in Exodus. So, I looked at every credible translation I have, as well as the Hebrew language, looking into the comment you made on the “four verbs”, I decided I’m not a Hebrew language scholar, and simply didn’t currently have the time to read your book, but, I know a few people that are, so I asked Tim Hegg, from Torah Resource Institute, about it. And the following, although lengthy, is his reply.

“God not only assures Moses that it is safe for him to return to Egypt but He also informs him in advance that Pharaoh will not listen to his request to let the people go. The reason for Pharaoh’s recalcitrance, how- ever, is at first confusing—Pharaoh will reject Moses’ request because God Himself will harden his heart (4:21): “… but I will harden his heart so that he will not let the people go.” Here we come face to face with the age old question of God’s sovereignty and man’s will. If God hardened Pharaoh’s heart even before Moses ever approached him, how could Pharaoh be held responsible for his actions? This is the very question asked by the Apostle Paul (Rom 9:19): “You will say to me then, ‘Why does He still find fault? For who resists His will?’” In other words, if God controls the heart, then is the individual responsible for his or her responses? Paul’s answer is clear (9:20): “On the contrary, who are you, O man, who answers back to God? The thing molded will not say to the molder, ‘Why did you make me like this,’ will it?” In other words, the sovereignty of God is beyond our ability to understand and give full explanation. Even as a pot has no ability to question the will of the potter, so mankind lacks the ability to understand the mystery and greatness of God. In the end, we must affirm both sides of the equation: God is the One Who controls all things, and each individual person is held responsible for his or her choices. The fact that we cannot reconcile these two realities in no way diminishes either of them. All who are truly redeemed by God’s grace, however, have no difficulty confessing that their salvation is in every way the result of God’s grace, not something they deserved or earned.

In general, the debates that have ensued over the issue of God’s hardening Pharaoh’s heart have taken two different perspectives. On the one hand, some have found the whole idea that God would harden a person’s heart against Himself so repugnant that they cannot accept this as true. As such, they either reject the Bible’s revelation of God (“I can’t accept a God Who would diminish a person’s free will”), or they seek to find ways to reinterpret those passages that affirm God’s sovereign control in the affairs of men. One such approach for our specific text is to say that Pharaoh hardened his own heart, and those verses that say God hardened it should be understood to mean not that God was active in hardening Pharaoh’s heart, but that He simply allowed Pharaoh to harden his own heart.

Both of these perspectives, however, begin with a view of God that is clearly unbiblical. The Bible does not present God as someone who must answer to anyone other than Himself. God is not required to submit Himself to any law or standard which resides above Him. He is, by nature, fully consistent with His own character, but does not “play second fiddle” to any other sovereign or law. As such, all that is righteous is determined by God Himself. It is therefore both unbiblical and illogical to subject God and His actions to the scrutiny of some supposed standard of “fairness.” God, and all He does, is the standard of righteousness and fairness.
The idea that God only confirmed what Pharaoh had already decided is not satisfying either, for the simple reason that salvation is only possible where God breaks in and overrides man’s decisions. That is to say, for God to allow man to go his own way is in every case to condemn that person to damnation, for only when God breaks into one’s life and over-powers the will does that person turn from wickedness to serve God with a pure heart. But even from the perspective of a humanist, a God who has the power to save from damnation but does not, is as guilty as if He had condemned the person outright.

The Exodus texts make the following amply clear:
1. God hardened Pharaoh’s heart so that he would reject the pleas of Moses and Aaron, so that God’s power in bringing Israel out of Egypt would be manifested (7:3-5, cf. Rom 9:17–18).
2. God promised Moses that He would harden Pharaoh’s heart before Moses ever stood before Pharaoh (4:21).
3. Pharaoh participated in the hardening of his own heart (8:15, 32; 9:34)
4. The story makes it clear that a “hardened heart” manifests itself in rejecting God’s commands.

There are three different words used in the texts relating to the hardening of Pharaoh’s heart: חזק (chazaq), קׁשה (qashah) and כבד (kabad). The three words have various shades of meaning. חזק (chazaq), the most often used word, simply means “to be or make strong.” It can be in a good or evil sense; in this case Pharaoh’s heart was strengthened against God. קשה (qashah) means “to be difficult or heavy” and is used of “oppression, hard labor” and even of “labor in birth.” This term might be best used to describe Pharaoh’s heart as “obstinate.” כבד (kabad) generally means “to encourage or honor” or “to be heavy.” From a Hebrew perspective, to make someone or something “heavy” is to laden that thing or person with praise.

It should be noted that the only word used in connection with Pharaoh “hardening” his own heart is כבד (kabad), “to honor or encourage.” Pharaoh’s actions precede from his pride and desire to establish his own greatness. The word most often used of HaShem’s part is חזק (chazaq), “to strengthen or make strong.” In other words, God strengthened Pharaoh’s heart to remain rebellious against His command. The one time HaShem “encourages” Pharaoh in his pride (10:1) makes it clear that God acts sovereignly to accomplish His purposes and plans. While it may seem that God “dirties” His hands by encouraging Pharaoh’s pride, the reality is simply that God encourages Pharaoh to be what he in fact is: selfish and prideful. In this regard we may have an illustration of what the Apostle Paul speaks of in Romans 1:28, “And just as they did not see fit to acknowledge God any longer, God gave them over to a depraved mind ….” In other words, apart from God’s gracious intervention in the life of an individual, drawing that person to Himself, no one would ever come to Him (cf. Jn 6:44; Rom 3:9–18).

The following chart lists each occurrence in Exodus of the hardening of Pharaoh’s heart. Where the subject of the verb is clearly known, it is indicated. Blanks indicate the subject of the verb is ambiguous.

Verbs

In 4:22 we find the first clear use of the name “Israel” to designate the nation formed from the sons of Jacob. Moreover, Israel is designated as the firstborn son of Adonai: “Israel is My son, My firstborn.” This statement is foundational for the subsequent exodus story, for Adonai saves His “firstborn” but takes the life of each firstborn of the Egyptians. This important use of “firstborn” may also help us understand another difficult passage in our parashah, namely, the encounter between God and Moses as they lodged on their way to Egypt.

As Moses and his family stopped for the night, the text states that “Adonai met him and sought to put him to death.” The pronouns are ambiguous. Was God angry with Moses or with his son? Whom was He about to put to death? It would seem that the divine anger was directed toward Moses, not his son, but what HaShem about to take the life of the son because of Moses? But why would God be angry with Moses when He had clearly sent him to Egypt and Moses had complied with Adonai’s directions? This reminds us of the Balaam Oracles where Balaam is instructed by God to travel with the men who are about to arrive, and then the text says that God was angry with Balaam because he was going and the Angel of Adonai stood in his way to stop him (Num 22:20–22).

Even more puzzling is the manner in which the anger of God against Moses is assuaged. The issue revolves around the fact that one of the sons of Moses was not yet circumcised. The Sages are divided as to which son this was. Some (cf. b.Ned 32a; Mid. Rab. Exodus 5.8) taught that Eliezar, the secondborn, was born on the way to Egypt, and since (like the Israelites who did not perform circumcision in the wilderness) circumcising an infant while traveling presented possible life-threatening dangers, Moses had put off the circumcision until later. But this would not explain God’s wrath over the whole matter. Others of the Sages (Saadia, Ramban) believe it was Gershom, the firstborn, who remained uncircumcised, and a number of factors could have contributed to this neglect on Moses’ part. In some of the Ancient Near Eastern cultures, circumcision was ridiculed, and this may have contributed to Moses’ hesitation to circumcise Gershom on the eighth day as God had commanded. Or it is possible that Gershom was very weak as a newborn, and the circumcision was put off for health reasons but then neglected. Whatever the case, it may be the bold statement regarding Israel as God’s firstborn son (v. 22) that informs this perplexing story. Here is Moses, on his way to lead God’s firstborn son out of Egypt, His covenant people who would soon stand at Sinai and receive the Torah, and Moses himself had neglected to circumcise his own firstborn son had, in this sense, diminished the importance of the covenant made with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, the very covenant that would form the basis for God’s decisive action on behalf of Israel. If Moses were to lead the people in strength, then he would have to show himself to be faithful to God’s commandments. Neglecting to circumcise his own firstborn son would severely draw into question his own allegiance to the God he confessed to serve. Indeed, the exodus itself is centered in the covenant faithfulness of God toward His people, and thus it was incumbent upon His chosen leader, Moses, that the covenant also be held in highest regard.

Zipporah apparently understood this. Taking a flint knife, she circumcises her son. It should not go unnoticed that the normal word for “circumcising” (מול) is not used here but rather the common word “to cut” (כרת). Perhaps this is to parallel the common Hebrew expression for making a covenant, i.e., כרת ברית, karat b’rit, “to cut a covenant.” Then, in some kind of ceremonial act, Zipporah touches the severed foreskin of her son to “his feet (or legs)” (4:25), but once again we are not sure to whom the pronoun refers. The NASB inserts “feet of Moses” and the NIV puts “Moses” in brackets, while the ESV includes “Moses” but adds a marginal note. But the Hebrew has only “his feet,” and it may well be that this refers to the feet of the son, not of Moses. If so, this may have been done in order to show that the circumcision had been completed. Does this putting of the blood upon the feet parallel the putting of the blood upon the doorposts in the exodus from Egypt? In both cases, the blood acts as a sign which preserves life.

Then Zipporah proclaims (apparently to Moses): “Surely you are a bridegroom of blood for me” (ּכִי ִלי ַאָּתה ֲחַתן־ָּדִמים). All of this seems very strange, and no clear explanation can be given for the meaning of Zipporah’s words. It may be that by “bridegroom of blood” she implies that Moses’ life was spared through her having accomplished the circumcision of her son. Though some commentators have tried to link this with the custom in other Semitic peoples who circumcised a male just prior to his marriage, there is nothing in the context to warrant such a connection. Though perplexing, this story most likely is included here to emphasize the fact that obedience to maintain the covenant was all-important as the exodus event drew near, and particularly important for Moses who would be acting as God’s direct agent in leading the exodus of Israel from Egypt. He could not rightly be God’s covenant agent to His firstborn if he had neglected to administer the sign of the covenant to his own firstborn son.

The story continues by alerting us to the fact that God also instructed Aaron to go to the desert to meet Moses. Their meeting takes place at “the mountain of God” which is Sinai, the very region where Moses encountered the burning bush and received his instructions to return to Egypt. After meeting Aaron, they inform the “elders” as well as the people about God’s plan. Performing the miracles in their sight confirmed that God was active on their behalf, and thus “the people believed” and bowed and worshipped God Who had shown His faithfulness to help them in accordance with the promises He had made (4:31).

Chapter 5 gives us the account of Moses and Aaron’s first approach to Pharaoh. We already know that he will refuse their request to send the people forth to worship Adonai. Pharaoh makes it clear that he has no allegiance to Adonai (“I do not know Adonai,” 5:2) and thus is not required to obey His commands. Instead, he accuses Moses and Aaron of subversion and makes the servitude of the people harsher. Instead of supplying them with the necessary materials for making sun-hardened brick, he requires them to gather their own materials, but keeps the daily quota the same. The people were therefore required to do far more work than before. Moreover, those foremen who had been appointed to oversee the work were beaten when the quota was not met. Clearly, rather than bringing hope to the people, the meeting which Moses and Aaron had with Pharaoh had resulted in a much, much worse situation.

From the posture of worship, the people turned upon Moses and Aaron: “They said to them, “May Adonai look upon you and judge you, for you have made us odious in Pharaoh’s sight and in the sight of his servants, to put a sword in their hand to kill us” (5:21). Such dire straits brought Moses to address the Almighty: “Why have You brought harm to this people? Why did you ever send me? …You have not delivered Your people at all!” (5:23). It is easy for us to shake our heads at the apparent unbelief, both of the people as well as of Moses. Had not God promised to deliver them? Had not God promised to be with Moses and Aaron and to make their mission successful? Yet if we can, for a moment, put ourselves in their situation, we might wonder how we would have fared in our own belief and the stamina of our faith. How often do we, in far less difficult situations, fail to exercise a persevering faith in God and succumb rather to complaint and discouragement?

But note well God’s response to Moses. He does not rebuke Moses, nor chastise him for his apparent lack of understanding and faith. Rather, He reaffirms His own plan to deal sovereignly with Pharaoh and with Egypt as a whole. “Now you will see what I will do to Pharaoh…” (5:23). Often God must bring us to the end of ourselves before we will acknowledge and trust His greatness. The exodus would not be effected by Moses or Aaron, even if they were valiant leaders. The redemption from Egypt would be by the sovereign, omnipotent hand of God Himself. And this could have only been the case, for the exodus was forever to stand as an historical drama revealing God’s way of redemption. God, and God alone, is the One Who saves, and the exodus, in every detail, will emphasize this over and over again.”

Mark Randall

I’m not talking about, nor is Tim, God “restraining His capabilities”. We’re talking about whether or not God has to “wait” for us, our finite human self’s, before He can act. And this is a prime example of how in fact God does raise people up, harden or soften hearts or open or place blinders of peoples eyes, that were intended by design for His sovereign purposes and creation. Which, in my opinion, and apparently Tim’s as well, and many others too, makes it clear that in fact God has predestined, preordained, and foreknows events that mankind can not in anyway, regardless of what we “think”, change by what we do or say. And more specifically doesn’t have to wait for our action or lack of before He does what He had already purposed. And that isn’t to say that we don’t have choices to make within the bounds that God has created. Nor does it mean we aren’t responsible for our actions, as Pharaoh most certainly experienced, either. And it seems obvious that God did in fact raise Pharaoh up and intentionally harden his heart for His purposes. And Pharaoh, had no freewill or choice in that sovereign act from Him, that would make it turn out any other way.

And to be very clear. I absolutely am not saying I have this whole understanding of freewill of free choice down. My only points are that we most certainly don’t make God “wait”. And God, from a bible perspective, does in fact know the beginning from the end, and everything in between. Nothing comes up unexpectedly, and “random events” or our finite choices don’t determine outcomes that God has already established.

And I think Paul makes those points, as I pointed out earlier, as did Tim in the above response to my question to him based on your comment, “God does wait to see what human beings will choose and He then acts in accordance with His will and human choices”.

May your trip to China be blessed Skip.

laurita hayes

This is a marvelous discussion. I am really wowed back by the in-depth answer Mark Randall received! I learned a lot! Thank you too, Skip, for taking the time to answer back and to clarify your points.

I think that there cannot be a discussion about the sovereignty of God, at least from our perspective, without a concurrent discussion of a seeming ‘bound’ of His sovereignty; a bound that He has clearly built in FOR HIMSELF; namely, our simultaneous sovereignty; in a limited sense concomitant with the nature of the human creature that it was assigned to, of course. In this sense – the assignment of free will – more than any other sense, we are surely made in the image of our Creator. If we say that He cannot have a bound because He is Sovereign, than what are we saying? If He is Sovereign, then can He not establish anything He has a mind and purpose to? And if He chooses to bound Himself in regards to our free will, so as to share what may arguably be His most precious attribute with us, then can anyone tell Him He cannot? Is not this ability to limit Himself of His own will the best proof that He is truly sovereign? And does He not require the same test of sovereignty for us; namely, a VOLUNTARY bounding of our own will back, as a proper reciprocal of gratitude and praise for this most marvelous of gifts?

As I look at false religions, I think I see a common thread through all of them. In not one of them do I see a clear profile for free will. In all of them, I see distortion, denigration, or downright denial of free will of some sort. None of them celebrate free will! It seems we don’t like our gift so well! We fear it; we trade it in; we pretend it does not exist. We want our money back! Even though fear is what we experience when we perceive that we have no choices, it seems choice itself is our greatest fear! We don’t like the responsibility it comes packaged with. And that is the truth. We will buy almost anything, it seems, that promises to remove responsibility. And that is what I think I see the biggest selling point of all false religion is; we don’t have to be responsible! In fact, ducking responsibility is what seems to top the list of human desires, and what the devil seems to package the majority of his wares with: Duck-responsibility-ing Tape.

Ok, does it sound like I am the parent of young adults; all of us learning what this sovereignty-responsibility-choice-sharing thing looks like? I really feel for God, some days! Speaking as a parent….

Dawn McL

You add so much to this discussion Laurita! I so agree with the thought that so much of what we choose is ultimately to avoid responsibility. Indeed, we all would like to be simply followers so we always have a fall guy when things don’t work out for the better.

God gives us free will so we can make choices BUT then we have to be responsible for those choices and that is one scary deal at times. If we simply stand still and make no move towards anything, there is nothing for God to work with. We demonstrate no trust or faith in Him at all. When we move and have some direction we open up a whole canvas for God to work on! The possibilities seem endless to me. It is like a continual game of dominoes but we have to be willing to MOVE!

I think the refusal to do anything must be a disappointment to God much like a fathers disappointment in a son who will not take his advice and learn from his wisdom in life. God gives us plenty to go by thru His word and yet we fail at this many times.

Fear is such an issue for us humans. God does not leave us with an attitude of fear. Why do we pick this up? I have been so blessed by the recent writings of Skips in addressing this fear and leaving it behind. I have a future ahead of me that I can and do trust to God. I cannot know what this may hold but I can look back and see what He has done thru my life and my choices–both good and bad ones!
He has done some amazing things although I have not always made the most faithful choices. I have suffered as well but that is to be expected.

I am not what I once was but not yet what I will fully become! I love to wake up each day and consider what God may have for me. It is an adventure for sure every time!!

laurita hayes

P.S. I guess my point is that when I look at Pharoah’s paradigm, I see the toe-to-toe challenge of his religion vs. the True one. There can be no challenge; no real contest, if the outcome has already been rigged from the outset. But there is no room for true respect in that, is there? No respect for the creature by his Creator, but also no room possible back for respect for the creature toward his Creator. If there is no true room for respect, there is no room for change; only room for hate and fear. Why would YHVH love Pharoah, who was raised in the same household as Moses at the same time, any less than He loved any of the rest of us?

Please forgive me in advance for rampant quoting of another source, as I am no scholar, and most certainly not an Egyptian one! And please correct me, too! But here goes:

So many times we can only see the big wooden horse in the middle of our town, or only the shells on the table; we do not go looking for things OUTSIDE direct causal connection. But look at the Exodus’ Pharoah’s (Thutmosis III) family. Look at the HUGE changes that occurred right after him. First of all, look at the murder of Moses’ wonderful adoptive mother, Hatshepsut, who took the throne after Moses had refused it. I wonder why she was forced to share it with the illigitimate half-son of the Pharaoh, Thutmosis II? Why were all her records of her reign before him destroyed, and why was she eventually probably murdered? Look at the change from the worship of many gods to the attempt to install worship of the One, instituted by Amen-hotep III, the Exodus’ Pharoah’s grandson? And look at his son, the husband of the lovely woman Nefertiti, who changed his name to Akhen-aten, and look at the legacy he left for his six daughters, one who married a man who was named Tutank-aten, who later mysteriously changed his name back to Tutank-amen. Look also at the attempt to introduce the idea, the very WORD FOR, Truth itself, which Akhen-aten invented, because Egypt had none for it. He is referred to as the “first individualist in history”. Hmm I wonder why. After he moved the capital city from Thebes, the City of the gods, commissioned many amazing portraits with him loving his family, obviously converted many around him, judging by all the name-changing that went on, they were all mysteriously murdered or forcibly converted. The names went back. Like King Tut’s. Hmm

Only after that, did Egypt go into decline.

laurita hayes

Finally, y’all (and I am going to shut up, I promise); when I look at Pharaoh’s religion, I see ALL the limits of choice already built in to his paradigm that kept him from being able to learn from the plagues. YHVH did not have to limit him AT ALL. All He had to do was step back and let Pharaoh’s religion DO IT ALL. Now that is something that I just don’t see can be argued. The limiting of choice is something that WE choose on our end. Always.

I think we have to know who to blame and Who to glorify. Why attribute the FORCE that is so contrary to YHVH, to Him, when it is always SIN that forces us? Why are we attempting to attribute something to Him that originates in the Accuser? All YHVH has to do is step back to let that system take over. I think with Pharaoh, He just stepped back and let him drown in his own Male Cow Aftereffects. I don’t think YHVH does that stuff. He does not have to. We already do it way too well….