Paidion, are you letting philosophy get in the way of the text? Maybe? And maybe some definitional differences are causing some confusion?Paidion wrote:
Tomorrow, I have been appointed to get a checkup with my doctor. But I am not predestined or fated to do so. I may choose not to keep my appointment. Similarily, those whom God has appointed may choose not to comply. It just so happened that all of the Gentiles who were listening to Paul and Barnabus, and who were appointed to aeonion life, believed. They didn’t have to do so. But they did. In other cases, I am sure that some of those whom God had appointed chose not to believe.
Your analogy I think is flawed I believe because it is confusing time and attributes of the one making the appointment.
What is a destination? A place were you want to BE. You can plan to go somewhere which is what you are doing in your analogy but you are not "pre destining" in the true sense of the word. That is why scripture tells you NOT to say we will go here or there but to say "If the Lord wills". So you are correct that it is not predestining but you can MAKE an appointment and you are totally free to change that appointment. And in the analogy you are "appointing yourself". In the passage it is GOD who was doing the appointing not the gentiles themselves.
But the classical meaning for fate is that you are being FORCED to go AGAINST your will. Fate comes from the myth of the gremlin like little "fates" that went around causing people and things to happen AGAINST their will. This is not pre destination or what Calvinism teaches.
And I do have an issue with what you said concerning the Gentiles. On what I said above, GOD is the one who appointed them to eternal life. With that in mind, when God purposes to do something He does it and does not fail to accomplish what He purposes.
So here's my beef. You said "I am sure that some of those whom God had appointed chose not to believe. "
The scripture said "AS MANY AS were appointed believed.
Luke didn't say Most who were appointed, or some, but it is saying the ones who where appointed believed. You statement fails also because of the one doing the appointing is God. If He appointed one to eternal life and they don't believe, He failed in His purpose and that goes against scripture "I will accomplish all my purpose".
Therefore, those whom God purposed to appoint DID believe. Who can stay his hand?