So should I follow what you say, if I want to be correct?
Read and study the Bible if you want the truth.
So should I follow what you say, if I want to be correct?
Read and study the Bible if you want the truth.
But not the willingness. Which you've already admitted about yourself.
So I shouldn't trust what you say then?
The Holy Spirit is in the world calling all to come to Christ.
"Today if you hear his voice, harden not your heart" Hebrews 3:15.
Confirm everything by scripture.
If it isn't according to the Bible scrap it.
But at one point you were not willing, even though you were able. So your earlier point about Calvinism was incorrect.
Before I became a Christian I was hounded by the Holy Spirit, but I just simply dismissed it. I had a Christian wife that was a strong witness for Christ and his Gospel.
Nothing is correct about Calvinism, NOTHING!
I did. Which is why I'm a Calvinist.
Calvinism was conceived by John Calvin, not the Bible.
There are many, many, scriptures that are not according to Calvinism.
If you are going to follow Calvinism you will have to deceive yourself and believe lies.
Right. You were not willing. It had nothing to do with ability. That is what Calvinism teaches. So your claim that Calvinism teaches that you can't come unless chosen is incorrect.
God chose all of humanity in Jesus Christ.
Salvation has been provided for all, but it is not yours if you don't receive it, John 1:12.
Right. You were not willing.
Not relevant to what I said. We were discussing one of your claims against Calvinism, which I demonstrated was untrue.
If free will doesn't exist, how could he be?
You are doing just what I said Calvinist do.
They deceive themselves and believe lies.
Free choice exists. But we cannot chose against our nature.
Not in the way synergists want.
No. It doesn't exist at all, in any reasonable sense of the word "free," if it is predetermined by our nature and cannot violate or contradict that nature. If, on the other hand, God "gives" you "free will," it is (according to Calvinism) only to do that which He has predetermined one will do, and His will cannot be thwarted by ours. In that case, your "free will" still isn't free.
You're not advocating will, you're advocating fatalism at best and puppetry at worst. Divinely orchestrated or mechanistically preprogrammed, what you call "will" isn't because it is not free.
That makes the offer of the Gospel a lie, and God a liar.