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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Preordination

Preordination \Pre*or`di*na"tion\, n. [Cf. F. pr['e]ordination.] The act of foreordaining: previous determination. ``The preordination of God.''
--Bale.

Wiktionary
preordination

a. Before ordination. n. The state or process of things being preordained.

WordNet
preordination

n. (theology) being determined in advance; especially the doctrine (usually associated with Calvin) that God has foreordained every event throughout eternity (including the final salvation of mankind) [syn: predestination, foreordination, predetermination]

Usage examples of "preordination".

I had somehow unaccountably suffered my theological qualifications to fall into desuetude, since my acquaintance with the ablest and most rigid of all theologians, I had nevertheless hopes that, by preaching up redemption by grace, preordination, and eternal purpose, I should yet be enabled to benefit mankind in some country, and rise to high distinction.

Caldwell seemed to have made up his mind, and Hunt knew from experience that when Caldwell made up his mind that something would be so, then by some uncanny power of preordination, so it would inevitably turn out to be.

I think, never was there such a visible preordination seen in the lives of any persons, as was seen in that of this worthy decent woman, and her well-doing off-spring.

The facts of his life gradually assembled with the graceful preordination of words in a litany.

I took that to mean that there was no preordination of events, that time and situation were mutable.

Divine preordination from eternity of those things which are to be done in time by the grace of God.

He has, for example, demonstrated the preordination of the United States of America by the prominence of the number 13 in major league baseball scores on July 4, 1976.