Does Predestination Make God the Author of Sin?
The most emotionally charged objection to Reformed theology — and one that Scripture itself anticipates and answers.
The Objection Stated
This is the objection that lands hardest. It's visceral. It's personal. It deserves a thorough answer because it cuts at the heart of how we understand God's character.
This objection deserves respect. It's not a frivolous charge. The stakes are nothing less than God's moral character. If the objection is correct, then Reformed theology makes God out to be evil. We cannot simply dismiss it with a cliché or a hand wave. We must answer it biblically, theologically, and charitably.
And the good news is: we can.
Scripture Anticipates This Objection
Here's something remarkable: the apostle Paul, in Romans 9, anticipates this exact objection before anyone raises it.
Paul doesn't apologize for the doctrine. He doesn't soften it. He says: "You will say to me then..." He knows exactly what his doctrine provokes.
And here's the crucial insight: this objection only makes sense if Paul has been teaching what Reformed theology teaches. If Paul had been teaching that God merely foresees who will freely choose Him, no one would object with "Why does He still find fault?" That question presupposes unconditional, sovereign election. The very fact that the objection arises proves Paul taught it.
Paul's response is not to deny the doctrine. It's to appeal to God's authority. God is the potter; we are the clay. We are not in a position to demand that God justify His decrees to us.
The Critical Distinction: Ordaining vs. Authoring
The confusion at the heart of this objection is the conflation of two different things: ordaining and authoring.
The Westminster Confession of Faith captures this distinction perfectly:
Notice the "yet so as" — there's a qualifier. God ordains all things, yet does not author sin. How is this possible? Through the doctrine of primary and secondary causation.
Primary and Secondary Causation
God is the primary cause of all things. He ordains, He decrees, He permits all that comes to pass. Nothing happens outside His sovereignty.
Creatures are secondary causes. Human beings act according to their own desires, their own natures, their own choices. And they are morally responsible for those choices.
God ordains the end AND the means. He ordains that sin will occur through the free (though fallen) agency of creatures. This is crucial: God doesn't force creatures to sin against their will. He ordains that they will want to sin, and they freely do so according to their nature.
An Analogy
A playwright writes a play. In the play, there is a villain. The playwright is the author of the play, but is the playwright the author of villainy? No. The playwright created a character who acts villainously according to the character's own nature. The character is culpable for the evil they do within the story. The playwright is the author of the narrative in which that evil occurs, but not the author of the evil itself — the character is.
Similarly, God ordains that evil will come to pass through the free agency of creatures. God is the author of creation and providence, but not the author of sin. The creature is.
The Biblical Evidence: God Ordains What He Does Not Author
Scripture gives us multiple examples of God ordaining evil without authoring it. These examples show that the Reformed distinction is not a philosophical abstraction — it's woven throughout the narrative of Scripture.
1. Joseph and His Brothers
Here is the clearest biblical statement of the distinction. The same act — selling Joseph into slavery — was intended by the brothers for evil and by God for good. God ordained that it would happen. But the brothers, not God, are the moral agents responsible for the evil. They meant it for evil. They are culpable. Yet God ordained it for a holy purpose.
2. The Crucifixion
God planned the most evil act in history — the murder of His Son. He did so "according to the definite plan." He "predestined" it to take place. Yet the men who did it were "lawless." They are morally culpable. Their sin remains sin. Yet God ordained it.
If God planning the cross — the most evil act in history — does not make Him the author of sin, then God planning all things does not make Him the author of sin either.
3. Pharaoh
God says He "raised up" Pharaoh — He ordained Pharaoh's hardness for His own purpose. Yet the Scripture also says that Pharaoh hardened his own heart (Exodus 8:15). Both statements are true simultaneously. God hardened Pharaoh's heart, and Pharaoh hardened his own heart. This is the simultaneity of primary and secondary causation.
4. Assyria, the Rod of God's Anger
God uses Assyria as His instrument of judgment against Israel. He sends them; He commands them. Yet He then judges Assyria because "he does not so intend" — because Assyria acted from evil motive, seeking to destroy and conquer, not to execute God's judgment. Assyria is the agent; their evil intentions are real; yet God used their evil for His holy purpose and will judge them for it.
5. Satan and Job
God permits Satan to afflict Job. Satan is the agent; his malice is real. Yet God sets boundaries. He sovereignly permits what Satan does. Job, in his suffering, recognizes that it is the Lord who has "taken away." And the narrator tells us that "in all this Job did not sin by charging God with wrong" (Job 1:22). The Lord is sovereign, Satan acts, Job suffers justly, and in God's providence, Job is vindicated.
The Philosophical Framework
Compatibilism: The Coexistence of Sovereignty and Responsibility
Reformed theology embraces compatibilism — the view that God's complete sovereignty and human moral responsibility are not only compatible but mutually reinforcing. How? They operate on different levels of causation.
God decrees; humans act freely according to their nature. A man sins because he wants to sin. His desire to sin is real. His choice to sin is real. He is fully responsible. And God ordained that he would want to sin. The two truths do not contradict each other; they coexist at different levels of reality.
The Nature of "Free Will"
Here's where much confusion enters. When we speak of human freedom, we do not mean the libertarian notion of "the power of contrary choice" — the ability to choose otherwise given identical circumstances and God's knowledge. That is not what freedom means in Scripture or in classical Christian theology.
Freedom is acting according to one's desires without external coercion. A fallen person sins freely — they want to sin. No one is forcing them. They are not coerced. They act according to their nature. And they are fully culpable.
God doesn't force anyone to sin. He created them with a nature that, after the fall, freely chooses sin. The creature acts freely; God ordains that they will want to act that way.
Why the Alternative Is Worse
Some ask: "But couldn't God have created a world where everyone freely chose Him?" Maybe. But God created this world. And if God does not ordain all things that come to pass, then there are events outside His control.
This means: evil happens without purpose, suffering is meaningless, and history has no direction toward redemption. If God did not ordain the fall, He could not have ordained the cross. If God did not ordain humanity's sin, He could not guarantee that His promises will be fulfilled.
The Arminian "solution" (God merely permits sin) doesn't actually solve the problem. Because a God who could prevent evil but chooses not to is no less morally responsible in the Arminian's own framework. And He has no purpose for it — it's just pointless suffering in a directionless cosmos.
For a deeper exploration of compatibilism, see Compatibilism: Freedom, Responsibility, and Divine Sovereignty.
The Arminian's Own Problem
Here's something worth noting: the objection cuts both ways. The Arminian doesn't escape the problem; they just relocate it.
Arminians affirm that God foreknows every sin that will come to pass. They believe God knew, before creation, that Adam would sin, that billions would reject Christ, that the Holocaust would happen. God knew all of this.
So the question arises: If God foreknew every sin and still created the world, how is this morally different from ordaining sin?
If God could have created a world where everyone freely chose Him (given His foreknowledge of all free choices), but instead created this world — a world He knew would be full of sin and suffering — then God intentionally chose a world with sin. He knowingly brought into existence a world of evil.
How is this morally different from ordaining it?
The Arminian has the exact same problem: a God who foresees evil and creates anyway. The Reformed position is actually more comforting, because it says evil serves a purpose in God's plan. In the Arminian scheme, evil is just... there. Pointless. Without meaning. God permits it, but for no purpose.
We would rather have a God who ordains all things for His glory and our ultimate good than a God who merely permits evil to happen for no reason at all.
The Cloud of Witnesses
The Reformed understanding of this issue is not new. The church's greatest minds have grappled with it and arrived at the same conclusions.
The Comfort of Sovereignty
End here. Not with abstract theology, but with pastoral comfort. The doctrine of God's sovereignty over evil is not cold, impersonal theology. It is the deepest comfort a suffering saint can have.
If God is not sovereign over evil, then evil is sovereign over something. And if evil is sovereign, there is no comfort. There is no hope. There is only chaos and meaninglessness.
All things. Not some things. Not the good things. All things work together for good. This includes the evil things. The loss, the heartbreak, the injustice, the pain. God weaves it all into a tapestry of redemption.
The cross is the ultimate proof. The worst evil in all of history — the murder of the innocent Son of God — produced the greatest good in all of history: the redemption of sinners. If God had not ordained the cross, there would be no salvation. No hope. No adoption into His family.
God does not author sin. He is not the villain in the story. He conquers it. He defeats it. And He conquers it precisely through His sovereign decree. The arms of the cross stood as a declaration to all creation: God is sovereign, God is good, and evil — for all its power — serves His purpose.
This is why the Reformed doctrine brings peace, not despair. Because we know that our God reigns. That nothing — not sin, not Satan, not suffering, not death itself — falls outside His sovereign care. We are safe in the hands of a God who ordains all things and authors none of the evil, who permits sin but purchases redemption, who grieves our sorrows and guarantees our final joy.
Soli Deo Gloria. To God alone be the glory.
Further Reading
Continue Your Journey
Divine Sovereignty and Human Responsibility
Explore how God's complete control and human accountability are both true.
Is God Unfair?
Address the common objection to Reformed theology and God's perfect justice.
Understanding Romans 9: Election and Predestination
Examine Paul's most direct teaching on divine election and human accountability.
Joseph's Story: Providence in a Fallen World
Witness God's sovereignty working through human sin—a biblical case study.
God's Decrees: A Systematic Exploration
Understand the logical framework of God's eternal counsel and how it includes all things.
If God Has Decreed All, Why Command Obedience?
Reconcile the divine decrees with God's imperatives and commandments to His people.