LIVE DISCUSSION: "The Potter, The Clay & Reprobation" (Part 4/5)
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The moment you assume grace must be “fair,” Romans 9 starts sounding offensive. We slow down and read Paul’s potter and clay argument the way it’s written: one lump of humanity, no special quality in the clay, and a God whose mercy is free because it isn’t owed. That leads straight into the toughest questions Christians ask about election, reprobation, and whether God is unjust.
We also unpack predestination without turning it into a cold math problem. The key move is foreknowledge: not bare awareness of future facts, but God’s forelove for his people. From that angle, predestination belongs to the beloved in Christ, and “double predestination” collapses under Paul’s own distinction between those “fitted for destruction” and those “prepared beforehand for glory.” Along the way we bring it down to earth with a debt-forgiveness analogy that exposes why forgiving some does not create an obligation to forgive all.
Then we zoom out to the story of salvation itself. Jesus is not Plan B, the crucifixion reveals real human blindness, and the Barabbas scene shows how pardon can be real even when the guilty go free and the innocent is condemned. If you’ve wrestled with God’s sovereignty, grace, mercy, justice, and what it means to be “condemned already” apart from Christ, this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves theology, and leave a review with the question you’re still wrestling with.
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