I don’t see those words. The prophet told him he was going to die (no specific date given). God healed him and told him he would live another 15 years.
Even if God changed the date, there is no denying that God is setting the date he would die.
Did Hezekiah choose to be a man of faith, of Abraham, ie, of God ordid God choose Hezekiah to be a man of faith, of Abraham, of God?
To be of the faith, of Abraham which I believe to be, the faith of God, which I believe to be, the learned obedience of the Son of God Heb 5:7,8 Phil 2:8
Sorry brother, but as I've told you before, and many have agreed, you never actually engage what others say, you only repeat your words without incorporating feedback. I cannot therefore engage with you.
That's a disingenuous defence. Many non-Calvinists here engage many Calvinists, and we sorely disagree but the majority take into account our words and integrate them into their feedback. You don't. Your replies, no matter what we say, are always a re-iteration of what you "know". You just repeat the mantras. That's not a conversation.
@canadyjd over here was not listening either today, but finally he did, and we were able to go on.
The day you integrate our points into your replies is the day we can resume conversation.
And I believe in predestination and election, they're in the Bible.
We disagree on this, I believe God called Abraham to be, of faith, so also Hezekiah, however I might add, we according to my thoughts reading your posts, usually agree on more than we disagree.
We will all be on the same page bye and bye for God will make sure of that.
For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face: now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known.
Ordained and determined do not equal "authored" in the sense that God created.
Second, no Calvinist that I know, says that humans do not exercise their will in rebellion against God. Instead, it is expressed that no human will can supercede God's will, nor can human will secure its own salvation so as to "accept" God's grace. Indeed, nowhere does God ever tell anyone that they "need to accept God's gift of salvation." Such teaching is wholely a creation of men who desperately want a share in their own salvation via an imagined cooperation with God.