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The doctrine that God decreed both election and reprobation before the fall. Supralapsarianism differs from infralapsarianism on the relation of God's decree to human sin. The differences go back to the conflict between Augustine and Pelagius. Before the [Reformation], the main difference was whether Adam's fall was included in God's eternal decree; supralapsarians held that it was, but infralapsarians acknowledged only God's foreknowledge of sin. Luther, Zwingli, and Calvin were agreed that Adam's fall was somehow included in God's decree; it came to be referred to as a "permissive decree," and all insisted that God was in no way the author of sin. As a result of the Reformers' agreement, after the [Reformation] the distinction between infra - and supralapsarianism shifted to differences on the logical order of God's decrees. Theodore Beza, Calvin's successor at Geneva, was the first to develop supralapsarianism in this new sense. By the time of the Synod of Dort in 1618 - 19, a heated intraconfessional controversy developed between infra - and supralapsarians; both positions were represented at the synod. Francis Gomarus, the chief opponent of James Arminius, was a supralapsarian. The question of the logical, not the temporal, order of the eternal decrees reflected differences on God's [ultimate goal] in predestination and on the specific objects of predestination. Supralapsarians considered God's [ultimate goal] to be his own glory in election and reprobation, while infralapsarians considered predestination subordinate to other goals. The object of predestination, [according to] supralapsarians, was uncreated and unfallen humanity, while infralapsarians viewed the object as created and fallen humanity. The term "supralapsarianism" comes from the Latin words supra and lapsus; the decree of predestination was considered to be "above" (supra) or logically "before" the decree concerning the fall (lapsus), while the infralapsarians viewed it as "below" (infra) or logically "after" the decree concerning the fall. The contrast of the two views is evident from the following summaries. The logical order of the decrees in the supralapsarian scheme is: (1) God's decree to glorify himself through the election of some and the reprobation of others; (2) as a means to that goal, the decree to create those elected and reprobated; (3) the decree to permit the fall; and (4) the decree to provide salvation for the elect through [Jesus Christ]. The logical order of the decrees [according to] infralapsarians is: (1) God's decree to glorify himself through the creation of the [human race]; (2) the decree to permit the fall; (3) the decree to elect some of the fallen race to salvation and to pass by the others and condemn them for their sin; and (4) the decree to provide salvation for the elect through [Jesus Christ]. Infralapsarians were in the majority at the Synod of Dort. The Arminians tried to depict all the Calvinists as representatives of the "repulsive" supralapsarian doctrine. Four attempts were made at Dort to condemn the supralapsarian view, but the efforts were [unsuccessful]. Although the Canons of Dort do not deal with the order of the divine decrees, they are infralapsarian [in the sense that] the elect are "chosen from the whole [human race], which had fallen through their own fault from their primitive state of rectitude into sin and [destruction]" (I,7; cf.I,1). The reprobate "are passed by in the eternal decree" and God "decreed to leave (them) in the common misery into which they have willfully plunged themselves" and "to condemn and punish them forever...for all their sins" (I,15).
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