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In Mere Theology (p. 52) I commented on this passage from Mere Christianity:
"Lewis borrows this idea from Boethius, a Christian philosopher born in Rome in A. D. 480. In book five of his Consolation of Philosophy, Boethius seeks to reconcile God's foreknowledge with human free will. God's knowledge is 'not a kind of foreknowledge of the future but the knowledge of a never ending present.' 'God sees all things in his eternal present.' In response to The Christian Century's question, What books did most to shape your vocational attitude and your philosophy of life? Lewis listed The Consolation of Philosophy as one of the top ten most influential books in his life. Lewis's line of though suggests, in regard to human salvation, that God has predestined who will be saved based on his foreknowledge of who will choose him."
But then if Lewis and Boethius are correct, about God being outside of time, there is no pre-destining and no fore-knowledge with God. There is, ultimately, only knowledge and destining. We must remember that all of the language of Scripture is an accommodation to our human knowledge and perspective, that is where the time element comes in. But there is no time element in God's eternal being. Time and space are both aspects of God's creation.
Thus if we paraphrase Romans 8:29 taking out the time references it reads like this:
"For those God knows he also destines to conformity to the likeness of his Son ..."
As I heard a Presbyterian preacher comment on this the other day he interpreted the passage to mean: "God is determined to shape you in the image of his Son." God is working through all the pain and suffering mentioned in the early part of Romans 8, to shape you like a sculptor shaping a block of stone, into a creation of great beauty. Alternatively, suffering in this life is like the birth pains of a mother delivering a baby into a new world. No mother likes those birth pains, but the end result is a good one. The end result of suffering in this life is to deliver us into God's new creation where we will be conformed to the image of Jesus. That is what God destines for those he knows. And that is good news for everyone who accepts it.
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