Good Saturday mornin’!
I believe “salvation” is in the word “justified“—
Moreover whom he did predestinate, them he also called: and whom he called, them he also justified: and whom he justified, them he also glorified.
Strong's Concordance
dikaiósis: the act of pronouncing righteous, acquittal
Original Word: δικαίωσις, εως, ἡ
Part of Speech: Noun, Feminine
Transliteration: dikaiósis
Phonetic Spelling: (dik-ah'-yo-sis)
Definition: the act of pronouncing righteous, acquittal
Usage: acquittal, justifying, justification, a process of absolution.
HELPS Word-studies
Cognate: 1347 dikaíōsis (a feminine noun derived from
1344/dikaióō, "to approve, justify") – justification (divine approval), emphasizing Christ's full payment of the debt for sin which liberates the believer from all divine condemnation.
See 1343(
dikaiosynē).
1347 /dikaíōsis ("justification") is used only in Ro 4:25 and Ro 5:18. It focuses on
the acquitted penalty by receiving Christ – i.e. as a person is
moved from eternal "condemned" to "divinely pardoned" at conversion. 1347 (
dikaíōsis) is the cognate in the
dik- word-family which most closely aligns with the theological meaning of the term justification."
[
1347 (
dikaíōsis), in ancient secular Greek, is closely associated with the pressing need to be released from
deserved punishment(Josephus,
Ant 18:14; Plutarch (
Art 14:3). Thuccydides (3.82.4) uses
1347 (
dikaíōsis) as "
justification, in our sense of the word" (C. Spicq, 1:345).