You are claiming that unbelief overrules the will of God. You are insinuating that the price Christ paid in ransom, falls short of achieving His goal.
Musterion said: “Christ ransomed every man, but many choose to disbelieve and so all do not benefit from His ransoming them.”
Nang said in response: “You are claiming that unbelief overrules the will of God. You are insinuating that the price Christ paid in ransom, falls short of achieving His goal.”
Would it help to know who the kidnapper is?
We agree the person being redeemed (set free to be able to go to the father as his little child [the only way we can come to God]) are children of God.
We agree that Deity is the payer of an unbelievable huge ransom payment.
We agree that the ransom payment is the cruel tortured, humiliated and murdered Christ.
What we do not agree to is “who is the kidnapper”?
If we say the kidnapper is:
“Sin”, “death” or some other intangible thing, why would anything have to be paid, to some nonbeing and what would sin do with this payment?
“Satan”, we have Deity paying a kidnapper that deserves nothing and Deity could just as easily take the children back without paying anything so it would be wrong to pay “satan” in that case.
“God”, why would God have to kidnap his own children? What value to God is there in Christ’s tortured, humiliated and murdered body? Would God not personally have preferred the blood of Christ to remain flowing through Christ’s veins? Does it not sound silly to have the Father paying himself to give to himself his children?
What about, the responsible person that is holding the child of God back from going to the Father. The person holding the nonbeliever back from becoming a child of God and rushing to the arms of God is the nonbeliever himself. Quit blaming others and realize when we were nonbelievers we were the kidnappers holding back the child within us from the father. Nonbelievers only has to accept the huge ransom payment being offered by deity.