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Definition and Description God the Father is the Author of the Divine Decree. The decree of God is His eternal, holy, wise and sovereign purpose, comprehending at once all things that ever were or will be in their causes, courses, conditions, successions, and relations and determining their certain futurition
May 7, 2017 · • The traditional definition “The decree of God is his eternal purpose according to the counsel of his will whereby for his own glory he has foreordained whatever comes to pass” (Westminster Shorter Catechism). • Simple definition “God’s ‘decrees’ are his decisions concerning all things outside himself.”
Click the File Folder to Download Your PDF OR Read Online Below The Doctrine of The Divine Decree. The decree of God refers to His eternal (always existed), Holy (perfect integrity), wise (the application of Omniscience to creation), and sovereign purpose.
By decrees is meant the eternal plan by which God has rendered certain all of the events of the universe (angelic history, human history) past, present, and future. The decrees of God are the chosen and adopted plan of God for all of His works.
God! A decree is an official order issued by a legal authority. A decree is taking God’s words and speaking them out. A decree from our lips can be loaded with life, restoring the fallen and reviving the forsaken. We have been given the authority from Jesus to speak decrees into our realms of influence, and as we do, we begin to create
Dr Grant C Richison. I. DEFINITION. A. Decree is God’s eternal plan. B. It is God’s eternal, holy, wise, and sovereign purpose, comprehending at once all things that ever were or will be in their causes, courses, successions and relations and determining certain futurition. C. In reality, there is only one decree–the sum total of God’s plan. D.
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The decree of God is His eternal plan or purpose, in which He has foreordained all things that come to pass. Since it includes many particulars, we often speak of the divine decrees in the plural, though in reality there is but a single decree. It covers all the works of God in creation and redemption, and also embraces the actions of men, not