There is a tension in my mind in attempt to grasp these. If there is freewill, it means your actions determine your outcome. If there is predestination, it means no matter what you do, you cant alter the outcome. But both above are mentioned in bible, which contradicts one another. Someone pls enlighten me thanks.
Let me give you an hypothetical scenario, and see if it's true that you can't have both free will and predestination?
Let's say God has created the world to save 10 billion people. And He sent forth His word to create these people. His Word cannot fail, and these people must be created. In effect this means that the billions of people produced beyond the planned 10 billion people cannot be saved, because they were not planned by God.
But let's say that God also built into His predestined Word a process, in which free will takes place. Then people fail, producing people either planned by God or people not planned by God.
What people are "planned by God," and those who are *not,* is part of the process of free will. When God's Word plans people, they can fail, or disobey God's Word, but they will always respond to God's Word, as well. When they are not planned by God, they can succeed in obeying God's Word at times, but ultimately they reject God's Word.
To put it bluntly, those planned by God accept the Word that planned them. They are drawn towards the fulfillment they were predestined to.
But those not planned by God are repulsed by the Word of God that had not planned them. God cannot plan for children He did not predestinate, and they will always reject the Word that did not predestine them.
That doesn't mean that people are not free to obey God or to disobey God. Whether planned or not, all can either obey or disobey God. But the critical element in Salvation is the acceptance of God's Word as an internal reality, remaking the person in the image of God.
Those who reject this Word can never do more than obey God occasionally and experience spirituality on occasion. They reject a complete makeover of their lives based on God's Word.
It's important, if this is true, to recognize that all men still have dignity, whether they will be saved or not, and that all men can obey God's Word. And so, we must declare the Gospel to all men, regardless of whether we think they will be saved.
The reward for Salvation is eternal life with God. But those who will not be saved and in close fellowship with God will still exist in some domain created by God with some distance. (It's called "Outer Darkness"--the Lake of Fire is purely an eternal condition of removal from the "Promised Land.") And to the degree they have obeyed God their punishment will be lightened. We should help all men, regardless of their outcome.