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Romans 8

Romans 8:29

Omniscience

Omniscience is the natural attribute of God’s infinite, all-encompassing perfect and complete knowledge of all things. God’s Omniscience goes beyond knowledge of everything past, present, and future to include complete knowledge of all possible realities, be they created or uncreated. In other words, God not only foreknows all that shall come to pass but God also knows what would have come to pass under any other set of circumstances or conditions.

This means that God’s knowledge is not contingent upon creation but that it is inherent to His nature – of knowing every and all things eternally. His knowledge is not anticipatory, accidental, derivative, manufactured, nor is it achieved – or acquired – through learning and or observation.

Click to open or close: Foreknowledge as a Consequence of Omniscience

Foreknowledge as a Consequence of Omniscience: Why Knowing Is Not Causing

Introduction

Few doctrines generate more confusion than the relationship between God’s foreknowledge and His sovereignty. Some assume that if God knows the future infallibly, then the future must be fixed because He fixed it. Others conclude that if God foreknows every human decision, then those decisions cannot be genuinely free. Both conclusions collapse two distinct concepts—knowledge and causation—into one.

A careful examination of Scripture, logic, and the nature of divine attributes reveals something far simpler and far more profound: foreknowledge is a consequence of omniscience, not a synonym for predetermination. God knows all things because He is omniscient; He does not cause all things simply because He knows them.


1. Omniscience: The Foundation of Foreknowledge

To understand foreknowledge, we must begin with omniscience. Omniscience means that God knows:

  • all things actual, 
  • all things possible, 
  • all things past, all things present, 
  • all things future, 
  • and all things that could have been under any possible set of circumstances.

God’s knowledge is not sequential, developing, or reactive. He does not learn. He does not discover. He does not wait to see what will happen. He simply knows, because His knowledge is grounded in His nature, not in the unfolding of time. From this, it follows naturally that: Foreknowledge is simply omniscience applied to the dimension of time. God knows the future because God knows everything. Foreknowledge is not a separate power; it is the temporal expression of His all‑knowing nature.


2. Why Foreknowledge Does Not Equal Predetermination

A common mistake is to assume that if God knows something will happen, then He must have caused it to happen. But this confuses certainty with causality.

Certainty is not causation.

  • If I know the sun will rise tomorrow, my knowledge does not cause the sunrise. 
  • If a meteorologist predicts a storm with 100% accuracy, her prediction does not cause the storm. 
  • If I watch a recorded hockey game, my knowledge of the outcome does not force the players to make the moves they made.

Knowledge describes reality; it does not create it. God’s foreknowledge works the same way. God knows what free creatures will do, but His knowing does not override their freedom. His knowledge is perfect, but it is not coercive. To say that God’s foreknowledge causes human decisions is to misunderstand both knowledge and freedom. It is also to misunderstand God’s relationship to time. God does not stand ahead of us in the future forcing events to occur; He stands outside of time, seeing all moments simultaneously.


3. Knowing All Possible Realities Does Not Mean Causing Any of Them

God’s omniscience includes not only the actual future but all possible futures. He knows:

  • every possible world in which you choose A,
  • every possible world in which you choose B,
  • and every possible world in which you choose neither.

This is sometimes called middle knowledge, but even without adopting that framework, Scripture affirms that God knows counterfactuals—what would happen under different conditions (e.g., 1 Sam. 23:11–13; Matt. 11:21–23). Yet knowing all possible outcomes does not mean God causes any of them. Knowledge of possibilities is not the same as determination of outcomes. Even if God chooses to actualize one possible world rather than another, the free decisions within that world remain genuinely free. His choosing the world does not mean He forces the choices within it.


4. Foreknowledge and Human Freedom

If God’s foreknowledge caused human actions, then:

  • warnings would be meaningless,
  • moral responsibility would collapse,
  • sin would be God’s doing,
  • and judgment would be unjust.

But Scripture consistently affirms:

  • God warns (Ezek. 18:30–32).
  • Humans are responsible (Rom. 14:12).
  • Sin originates in human will (James 1:13–15).
  • God judges justly (Rom. 2:6).

These truths only make sense if foreknowledge does not equal predetermination


5. The Hockey Analogy 

If I were to replay a recording of a hockey game that had already taken place between a home team and an away team, no one would imagine that my prior knowledge of everything that happened somehow meant I predetermined or manipulated the decisions or actions of the players. Even though I had already watched the game and knew every outcome, no one would conclude that I forced the players to make the moves they made.

Now imagine that I possessed true foreknowledge—actual knowledge of the future—and could record a hockey game before it happened. Even if such an ability would rightly be considered supernatural, it would still be wrong to assume that my foreknowledge of what will occur means I predetermined or controlled the decisions or actions of the players in that future game. Knowing what they will freely choose is not the same as causing them to choose it.

Now take that thought one step further. Suppose my knowledge extended not only to the future but to all possible realities. I could know every detail of a possible reality in which the home team wins, every detail of a possible reality in which the away team wins, and every detail of a possible reality in which the game ends in a tie. Yet even with exhaustive knowledge of all possible outcomes, my knowledge alone would not mean that I predetermined or controlled the decisions or actions of the players in any of those possible realities.

And even if I chose to record one of those possible realities—the one that will actually take place in the future—my choice of which reality to record still would not mean that I predetermined or manipulated the players’ decisions within that reality. My knowing what they will freely do, or even my choosing to record the reality in which they freely do it, does not transform their free actions into my causation.

My causation becomes even more distant if I were to share my knowledge with the players—warning them in advance about what certain decisions or actions will lead to. Even then, my informing them of the consequences would not mean that I caused those decisions. The players would remain fully responsible for their own choices, whether they acted in accordance with my warnings or ignored them entirely. My knowledge of what they will freely do, and even my communication of that knowledge, still does not transform their free actions into my causation.


6. Conclusion: Foreknowledge Is Descriptive, Not Causal

Foreknowledge is the natural outflow of omniscience. God knows the future because He knows everything. But His knowing does not mean His causing.

  • Foreknowledge describes what will happen.
  • Predetermination causes what will happen.

These are not the same. To collapse foreknowledge into predestination is to misunderstand God’s nature, human freedom, and the biblical witness. God’s omniscience is perfect, but it is not coercive. His knowledge encompasses all things, but His knowledge does not override the will He Himself created.

In short: God’s foreknowledge is perfect, but it is not predetermining. God’s omniscience is exhaustive, but it is not coercive. Knowing is not causing.

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