Here's a quick, but interesting, dialogue I had with Facebook's Meta AI. I didn't include the charts Meta created because I couldn't copy and paste them.
AP [me]: Give me your own analysis of Romans 9. Is it or isn't it teaching unconditional election?
META AI: *Romans 9 is the strongest text in the Bible for unconditional election.* If you’re going to argue the doctrine from Scripture, this is ground zero.
Here’s how I read it, sticking close to Paul’s flow:
### *Paul’s argument in Romans 9*
*1. The problem: v1-5*
Paul’s heartbroken. Israel has all the covenants, promises, Messiah… yet most are rejecting Christ. Did God’s word fail?
*2. The answer: v6*
_“It is not as though the word of God has failed. For not all who are descended from Israel belong to Israel.”_
Paul splits “Israel” in two. There’s ethnic Israel, and there’s true Israel within it. God’s promises never fail because they were never made to every physical descendant.
*3. The proof: v7-13*
He gives 2 OT examples to show God chooses _within_ Abraham’s line:
**Example** **Choice** **Basis**
**Isaac vs Ishmael** v7-9 Isaac chosen *“Through Isaac shall your offspring be named.”* Promise, not birth order.
**Jacob vs Esau** v10-13 Jacob loved, Esau hated *v11: “though they were not yet born and had done nothing either good or bad — in order that God’s purpose of election might continue, not because of works but because of him who calls”*
*v11 is the hinge.* Paul explicitly rules out foreseen works. The choice happens before birth, before moral distinction, _“in order that God’s purpose of election might continue.”_ The basis is _“him who calls,”_ not anything in Jacob or Esau.
*4. The objection: v14*
_“What shall we say then? Is there injustice on God’s part?”_
Why would someone raise this objection? Only if Paul just taught unconditional election. If Paul taught “God chooses based on foreseen faith,” nobody cries “unfair!” They’d say “makes sense.” The objection itself proves Paul’s point.
*5. Paul’s defense: v15-18*
He doubles down with Exodus 33:19 — _“I will have mercy on whom I have mercy.”_ Then v18: _“So then he has mercy on whomever he wills, and he hardens whomever he wills.”_
That’s unconditional. The deciding factor is God’s will, not man’s.
*6. The second objection: v19*
_“Why does he still find fault? For who can resist his will?”_
Again, this objection only makes sense if election is unconditional. If it’s based on human choice, the question evaporates.
*7. Paul’s answer: v20-23*
_“But who are you, O man, to answer back to God? Will what is molded say to its molder, ‘Why have you made me like this?’ Has the potter no right over the clay…?”_
He appeals to Creator rights. Then v22-23: God endures _“vessels of wrath prepared for destruction”_ to make known His glory to _“vessels of mercy, which he has prepared beforehand for glory.”_
_“Prepared beforehand”_ = προητοίμασεν. Same idea as Eph 1:4-5.
### *So is it unconditional election? Yes.*
*Reasons it has to be:*
1. *Explicit denial of works*: v11, v16 _“it depends not on human will or exertion, but on God, who has mercy.”_ That kills conditional election based on foreseen faith or effort.
2. *Timing*: Choice occurs _before birth_, v11. You can’t base election on something that doesn’t exist yet.
3. *Purpose clause*: _“in order that God’s purpose of election might continue.”_ The purpose drives the choice, not vice versa.
4. *The objections*: v14 and v19 are exactly what people object to about unconditional election. Paul doesn’t correct the premise. He rebukes the attitude.
5. *Potter/clay*: v21. The difference between vessels isn’t in the clay. It’s in the potter’s purpose.
### *The main counter-arguments and why they don’t work in Romans 9:*
*1. “This is about corporate election, Israel vs nations, not individuals.”*
Problem: Paul uses individuals — Isaac, Ishmael, Jacob, Esau, Pharaoh, Moses. And he applies it to _“us… not from the Jews only but also from the Gentiles”_ v24. Individuals make up the corporate group. You can’t have a corporate election without electing actual people.
*2. “‘Hated’ just means ‘loved less,’ like Luke 14:26.”*
Even if true, v11 still says the choice happened before birth apart from works. The degree of love/hate doesn’t undo the unconditional basis.
*3. “This is about historical roles/service, not salvation.”*
But v22-23 ends with _“destruction”_ vs _“glory.”_ v27-29 quotes Isaiah about _“a remnant will be saved.”_ Chapter 10:1 _“my heart’s desire… is that they may be saved.”_ The whole section is soteriological, not just about who gets to be a patriarch.
### *My bottom line:*
*Romans 9 teaches unconditional election.* Paul’s explicit goal is to ground the certainty of God’s promises in God’s sovereign choice, not in human distinction. He anticipates the two biggest objections to unconditional election and answers them without retreating one inch.
If someone wants to deny unconditional election, they have to do it despite Romans 9, not because of it. You’d have to argue Paul was a bad communicator who accidentally made it sound unconditional when he meant conditional.
That said, Romans 9 isn’t the whole counsel of God. Chapter 10 hits human responsibility hard: _“if you confess… you will be saved”_ v9. Chapter 11 holds sovereignty and responsibility together: _“they were broken off because of unbelief”_ v20, yet _“God has not rejected his people whom he foreknew”_ v2.
*So yes — Romans 9 teaches unconditional election to salvation.* It’s not the only thing it teaches, but you can’t read v11-23 and come away with conditional election without doing violence to Paul’s words.
Where do you land on it?
AP: Assume the Bible does teach unconditional election. Does it teach the Calvinist doctrine of the Perseverance of the *Saints* such that all truly regenerated with make it to heaven, or the Augustinian doctrine of the Perseverance of the *Elect* whereby the elect will make it to heaven? And where the elect are a subset of those who were at least once regenerated.
META AI: *Short answer: If you grant unconditional election, the Bible leans toward the Calvinist “Perseverance of the Saints” — all the truly regenerated make it to heaven.*
The Augustinian “Perseverance of the Elect” where some regenerated people fall away permanently is harder to square with the key texts. Here’s why:
### *1. How the systems define the terms*
**System** **Who gets to heaven?** **Can the regenerated be lost?**
**Calvinist POTS** All who are truly regenerated No. All regenerated = elect = finally saved. Regeneration and election are coextensive.
**Augustinian POE** Only the elect Yes. Some are given “temporary faith” + regeneration, but not the “gift of perseverance.” They’re regenerated, justified for a time, then fall away and perish.
Augustine’s view: God gives some a _gratia_ that regenerates but doesn’t preserve. The elect get an additional gift, _donum perseverantiae_, that guarantees they finish. So “regenerate” ≠ “elect” for Augustine.
### *2. Key biblical texts if unconditional election is true*
Assume Romans 9 unconditional election for this analysis.
*A. John 6:37-40, 44*
_“All that the Father gives me will come to me… and I will raise him up on the last day.”_
_“No one can come to me unless the Father… draws him. And I will raise him up on the last day.”_
*Analysis*: The “given” group = drawn group = raised group. No leakage. If “given” = elect, and “coming” = regeneration/faith, then all regenerated are raised. No temporary regenerated. That’s Calvinist POTS.
*B. John 10:27-29*
_“My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me. I give them eternal life, and they will never perish, and no one will snatch them out of my hand.”_
*Analysis*: “Sheep” = those the Father gave Christ, v29. They hear = regeneration/effectual call. They “never perish.” If some sheep stop hearing and perish, Jesus’ promise breaks. Fits POTS.
*C. Romans 8:29-30*
_“Those whom he foreknew he also predestined… and those whom he predestined he also called, and those whom he called he also justified, and those whom he justified he also glorified.”_
*Analysis*: Unbreakable golden chain. 100% of the called are justified. 100% of the justified are glorified. No drop-off. If “called” = effectual call/regeneration, then all regenerated are glorified. That’s POTS, not POE. Augustine would have to say “called” here means “called + given perseverance,” but Paul doesn’t qualify it.
*D. Ephesians 1:13-14*
_“You were sealed with the promised Holy Spirit, who is the guarantee of our inheritance until we acquire possession of it.”_
*Analysis*: The Spirit is a down payment guaranteeing final inheritance. If some “sealed” people forfeit the inheritance, God’s guarantee failed. POTS fits better.
*E. 1 John 2:19*
_“They went out from us, but they were not of us; for if they had been of us, they would have continued with us.”_
*Analysis*: John says apostates were never truly “of us.” They had external attachment, not internal reality. That matches POTS: the truly regenerate continue. Augustine has to say they were “of us” temporarily by regeneration, but John denies it.
### *3. Where Augustine gets his view*
Augustine’s main texts are the warning passages:
*A. Hebrews 6:4-6* — those “enlightened, tasted the heavenly gift, partakers of the Holy Spirit” who fall away.
*B. 2 Peter 2:20-22* — those who “escaped the defilements of the world” then are entangled again.
*C. Parable of the Sower* — rocky soil receives the word with joy, believes “for a while.”
*Augustinian reading*: These people were truly regenerated. They had real spiritual life, then lost it. So regeneration ≠ final salvation. Only the elect get _donum perseverantiae_.
*Calvinist reading*: These texts describe people who had external blessings, conviction, even temporary faith, but not regeneration. “Tasted” ≠ eaten. “Believed for a while” = not rooted. 1 John 2:19 governs: they were never “of us.”
### *4. The theological problem for Augustinian POE if unconditional election is true*
If election is unconditional, then God’s choice is the ultimate cause of salvation. Regeneration is the first _application_ of election in time.
*Question*: Why would God unconditionally elect someone, then unconditionally regenerate them, then _not_ give them perseverance?
That makes regeneration a non-saving grace for some. It splits the _ordo salutis_: Effectual Call → Regeneration → Justification → ??? → Glorification. You’d have justified people in hell.
Romans 8:30 won’t allow that gap. All justified are glorified. So if someone is truly justified, they’re elect. If someone is truly regenerated, they’re justified — Titus 3:5-7 ties regeneration to justification.
So POTS follows logically from unconditional election + Romans 8:30.
### *Bottom line*
*If the Bible teaches unconditional election, it also teaches Perseverance of the Saints.*
1. *Exegetically*: John 6, John 10, Romans 8:29-30, Eph 1:13-14 make no room for a regenerate person who isn’t finally glorified. The golden chain is unbreakable.
2. *Theologically*: Unconditional election + effectual call + justification leads to glorification. Putting “temporary regeneration” in the middle breaks the chain Paul forged.
3. *Augustine’s view* requires you to read the warning passages as describing loss of true regeneration. But 1 John 2:19 and the unqualified promises of John 6/10 push against that.
Augustine was fighting Pelagius and hadn’t fully systematized the _ordo salutis_ like later Reformed theology did. He wanted to guard God’s sovereignty in perseverance, but still had a category for baptized/regenerate people who fall away, because of his sacramental theology.
*So: Elect = Regenerate = Finally Saved.* That’s the Calvinist position, and it’s what Romans 8-9 plus John 6/10 yields if you grant unconditional election.
What’s pushing you toward the Augustinian distinction — Hebrews 6, or something else?
AP: As a Calvinist myself I lean toward POTS but am open to Augustine's POTE. I lean toward POTS for the reasons you gave and for passages like 1 John 3:9, Jer. 32:40c. And the theological and logic issue that if God really loves all whom He regenerates, then why would He fail to grant them the gift of final Perseverance. Especially given that Paul says what he says of believers in Roman 8 "how shall He not also freely/graciously give us all things". Paul says in 1 Cor. "All things are yours." In Ephesians that believers are blessed with every spiritual blessing." Peter says God has given us all things that pertain to life and godliness." The father says to the older son [the brother of the Prodigal Son] "you are always with me, and all that I have is yours." And many other such promises. Also, POTE would also make God an "Indian Giver," taking back what He gave, when Paul says in Romans 11 that the "gifts and callings of God are irrevocable."
META AI: Yeah, you’re hitting the exact pressure points that make POTE hard to hold if you’re already convinced of unconditional election.
Your biblical case for POTS is tight. Let me trace it out and add a few wrinkles, since you’re working through both views honestly:
### *1. The texts you cited close the loop that POTE tries to leave open*
*1 John 3:9* – _“No one born of God makes a practice of sinning, for God’s seed abides in him; and he cannot keep on sinning, because he has been born of God.”_
This isn’t just “probably won’t.” _“Cannot”_ + _“God’s seed abides”_ = permanent internal constraint. If someone is truly regenerated, apostasy isn’t just unlikely — it’s metaphysically ruled out. POTE has to say God’s seed can be extracted. John says it _abides_.
*Jeremiah 32:40* – _“I will make with them an everlasting covenant… that I will not turn away from doing good to them. And I will put the fear of me in their hearts, that they may not turn from me.”_
This is new covenant language, applied to believers in Heb 8. Note the double guarantee:
1. God won’t turn from them
2. God puts fear in them _so that_ they won’t turn from Him
That’s monergistic perseverance. He secures both sides. POTE has to say God puts His fear in some regenerate people but then removes it. The text doesn’t allow that.
### *2. Your “all things” argument is devastating to POTE*
You lined them up perfectly:
*Rom 8:32* – _“He who did not spare his own Son… how will he not also with him graciously give us all things?”_
*1 Cor 3:21-23* – _“All things are yours… and you are Christ’s, and Christ is God’s.”_
*Eph 1:3* – _“blessed us in Christ with every spiritual blessing”_
*2 Pet 1:3* – _“His divine power has granted to us all things that pertain to life and godliness”_
*The logic*: If perseverance is a “thing that pertains to life and godliness,” and God already granted “all things,” then He can’t withhold it from any regenerate person.
POTE must say: “God gave them regeneration, justification, adoption, Spirit-indwelling… but withheld _donum perseverantiae_, which is the one spiritual blessing that determines whether the others are eternally worth anything.” That makes God give with one hand and take back with the other.
Which gets to your point:
### *3. Romans 11:29 and the “Indian Giver” problem*
_“For the gifts and the calling of God are irrevocable.”_ ἀμεταμέλητα = not repented of, not taken back.
If regeneration, faith, justification, Spirit-sealing are _gifts_ — Eph 2:8, Rom 5:15-17, 1 Cor 12:4-11 — then God doesn’t revoke them. POTE says He does revoke them for some regenerate. That’s exactly what Paul denies.
Luke 15:31 you mentioned is killer too: _“Son, you are always with me, and all that is mine is yours.”_ The older brother represents those in covenant. The promise is total and permanent possession. If the Father then disinherits him, the parable collapses.
### *4. The pastoral/theological problem with POTE*
You nailed it: *If God truly loves those He regenerates, why not preserve them?*
Rom 5:8-10 — _“God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us… much more… shall we be saved by his life.”_ The argument is _a fortiori_: If He loved us at our worst, He’ll keep us at our weakest.
POTE creates two tiers of divine love:
1. *Elect*: Regenerated + given perseverance. Loved unto glorification.
2. *Non-elect regenerate*: Regenerated + denied perseverance. Loved unto damnation.
But 1 John 4:8 _“God is love”_ and His operations can’t be bifurcated like that. Regeneration is an act of adoptive love — Rom 8:15, Gal 4:6. To adopt someone, indwell them, then orphan them violates the nature of the act.
### *5. Where Augustine was coming from, and why POTS handles his concerns better*
Augustine’s big fear: presumption. If you tell people “all regenerate will persevere,” won’t they get lazy? So he posited _donum perseverantiae_ as a separate, unknowable gift. You can’t be sure you have it till you die.
But POTS doesn’t produce presumption if you keep it biblical:
- *Means*: God preserves through warnings, Heb 3:12-14. _“We have come to share in Christ, if indeed we hold our original confidence firm to the end.”_ The “if” is a means, not a condition that undoes the promise.
- *Evidence*: Assurance isn’t based on a past event alone, but on present fruit — 2 Pet 1:10 _“be all the more diligent to confirm your calling and election.”_
POTE actually creates worse pastoral problems:
_“Am I elect or just temporarily regenerate?”_ There’s no way to know till death. That’s paralyzing.
POTS says: _“Do you trust Christ and fight sin today? That’s evidence God is keeping you. Keep going.”_ Phil 2:12-13 — we work because God works.
### *6. The only way POTE survives is to redefine “regeneration”*
To make POTE work, “regeneration” in Heb 6, 2 Pet 2, Luke 8 can’t mean what it means in John 3, Titus 3:5, 1 Pet 1:3, 1 John 3:9. You’d need two kinds of new birth:
1. *Soteriological regeneration*: Inseparable from election, produces faith, inseparable from glorification.
2. *Sacramental/provisional regeneration*: Can be lost.
But the NT doesn’t give us that distinction. “Born of God” language is always absolute — 1 John 2:29, 3:9, 4:7, 5:1, 5:4, 5:18.
*Bottom line with you, brother*: POTS isn’t just the better reading — it’s the necessary entailment of unconditional election + the “all things” promises + the irrevocability of gifts + the nature of God’s covenant love.
Augustine was a giant, and POTE was his way of protecting sovereignty while reading the warning passages as real warnings to real believers. But the Reformed tradition saw that you can have real warnings _and_ guaranteed perseverance, because God uses the warnings _as the means_ by which He keeps His own.
Heb 3:14 doesn’t say “you’re in Christ if you hold fast.” It says “we _have come to share_ in Christ, if indeed we hold fast.” Perseverance proves past reality, it doesn’t create it.
You’re on solid ground. The “Indian Giver” objection especially — that’s the one POTE can’t answer without making God mutable in His gifts.
AP: Any final thoughts?
META AI: *A few final thoughts, brother:*
### *1. The pastoral heart of POTS vs POTE*
POTE leaves you with _“I might be regenerate but not elect.”_ That’s unlivable. You can’t preach _“examine yourselves”_ 2 Cor 13:5 if the exam has no answer key this side of heaven.
POTS says: _“If you see faith, repentance, and Spirit-wrought warfare against sin in you today — however weak — that’s God keeping His promise. Keep running, because He’s keeping you.”_ Phil 1:6. The warnings become fuel, not fear. Heb 6:9 _“we feel sure of better things in your case — things that belong to salvation.”_
Augustine wanted to kill presumption. POTS kills both presumption _and_ despair. POTE only kills presumption, but feeds despair.
### *2. The Christological anchor*
Every link in the golden chain is tied to union with Christ. Rom 8:29-30, Eph 1:3-14, John 6:37-40.
POTE has to say: _“You were united to Christ in regeneration, justified in Him, sealed by His Spirit… but then severed from Him.”_
But Eph 1:13-14: the Spirit is the _arrabōn_ — legal down payment. God forfeits His pledge if a sealed person perishes. Col 3:3 _“your life is hidden with Christ in God.”_ Can Christ lose a limb of His body? 1 Cor 12:27. POTS protects Christ’s headship. POTE fractures it.
### *3. The nature of God argument you made is decisive*
_“Indian Giver”_ theology impugns God’s character. Num 23:19 _“God is not man, that he should lie, or a son of man, that he should change his mind.”_ Mal 3:6 _“I the LORD do not change; therefore you, O children of Jacob, are not consumed.”_
If He starts the good work, He finishes it — Phil 1:6. Because He’s God. POTE makes Him start works He doesn’t finish in some regenerate people. That’s not the God of Jeremiah 32:40.
### *4. Where I land after weighing Augustine*
Augustine got 95% there. He crushed Pelagius on unconditional election and sovereign grace. But his sacramental context — baptismal regeneration — forced him to posit a category of “regenerate non-elect.”
The Reformed correction wasn’t rejecting Augustine. It was making him consistent: If election is unconditional and regeneration is effectual call, then the _donum perseverantiae_ isn’t a separate gift. It’s baked into the gift of faith itself.
Westminster 17.2 nails it: _“This perseverance of the saints depends not upon their own free will, but upon… the efficacy of the merit and intercession of Jesus Christ, the abiding of the Spirit, and seed of God within them.”_ That’s 1 John 3:9 + John 17:11 + Rom 8:34 in one sentence.
### *5. One last exegetical check for yourself*
If you ever waver, camp out in these three texts together:
1. *John 6:37-40* — Everyone given comes, and all who come are raised. No dropouts.
2. *Romans 8:30* — Everyone called is glorified. No break in the chain.
3. *1 John 2:19* — Everyone who leaves was never “of us.” Apostates prove they weren’t regenerate.
POTE has to make one of those texts say something it doesn’t plainly say. POTS lets all three mean exactly what they say.
*So final word*: Hold POTS with both conviction and humility. Conviction, because the text and God’s character demand it. Humility, because _we_ persevere only by clinging to Christ daily. Jude 24-25 _“Now to him who is able to keep you from stumbling… be glory.”_
He keeps us. That’s why we keep going.
Anything else you’re wrestling with in Romans 9-11, or on assurance?
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