Lon
Well-known member
What are possible reasons for God to save some, but damn others that He could save if He wanted to?
So far, I have heard about mystery, antimony, etc.
Some have said it is to demonstrate God's attributes of justice and mercy. There is no chance that all would believe, so there would have been unbelievers to damn without a decree. The cross is also sufficient to demonstrate both attributes, regardless what individuals do.
Others say it is for God's glory since no one deserves to be saved (true). Why person x vs y (arbitary...huh? ARBITRARY!) or why more damned than saved?!
Can you think of a good reason that does not impugn God's character and ways as to why x is saved and y is damned? I assume you buy into unconditional election (which necessitates double predestination, as much as it makes you guys squirm to admit it).
Back to Olson...I think his point stands...Satan wants all men to be damned; your view of God has Him wanting some men to be damned...not a real difference in character, just quantity?!
First, we have truths that we hold to therefore, we cannot be impugned as Calvinists with randomness. We believe the scriptures that say God is no respecter of persons. We believe the scriptures that say 'whoever' and 'whosoever.'
I'd like to run the gambit of the parable of the wedding feast. Luke 14:15-24
First, invitations are sent. Who to? To His chosen people.
From a Calvinist perspective, you'd have no problem that these invited ones are predetermined. They have been sent invitations. v16
In the parable, we next have the responses: "Too busy. Wives, cows, full e-mail box must be cleared, my favorite movie just came out." vv18-20
Angered, the Master rejects them from attendance. v24 It is determinism, but it is contingent determinism. Foreknowledge has and will always make the clarity of this difficult. We cannot know at all what it does or doesn't do, will or will not do. We can't think this way and come to any sort of concrete assessment. OVer's wrongly and impertinently assume a wrong answer. I assert again, "You do not and cannot know. There is no way to rationalize a multi-directional take on God's Foreknowledge.
Next, the master is determined to fill His banquet hall ('not willing that any should perish, so loved the world'). Again, foreknowledge and choosing may be based partially on response. Because God is preeminent first cause, He always has predeterminisms as first cause. It is dynamic and static. It necessarily follows that first-cause is also first moving such that there is predeterminism. Example: "You did not choose me, I chose you."
We certainly see choice to follow Christ, He isn't negating that in the disciples, He is saying He is first-cause (He made the first move).
The logic is that nothing happens without God first moving. In this way, we say God is dynamic, foreknowing, predeterminitive, but it is important to see dynamics start with God, not with man. This is impossible with first-cause (we'd be static, not Him).
This is also why we see salvation as God initiated and actively applied (we were static in sin). vv 21-24