Arthur,
When you say, "Is not the simplest answer often the best?"
I can only answer, often it is. (Occam's Razor y'know).
Yeah, that's what I was thinking about. It was in the movie
Contact One of the problems with this type of Reformed teaching is that they don't figure in the issue of time, or timelessness, as the case may be. We do not fully understand how God percieves time. Most believe that all times are as present to his omniscience.
In other words...they have God making what they call "Decrees". They argue about whether he decreed certain things before or after the fall...supralapsarianism versus sublapsarianism.
So...God didn't know who would be elect...then one "day" he suddenly decided to elect a bunch of folks to salvation, and damn the rest. Supralapsarians think he just did it...sublaparianins think he waited until man fell, then decided.
Where does that leave God's omniscience. Like He didn't know what he was going to do? Then he found out what he was going to do?
So, God doesn't even know what he will do in the future?
Huh?
I also believe that all times are as present to God. That being the case, then all of what is recorded in the Bible - creation, fall, Christ's sacrifice, Christ's second coming, our being with Him for eternity - is all known by God and in plain view. Maybe it's kinda like reading a book. We hold the whole story in our hands and we can easily jump from first page to last page. So too all of humanity's existence must be to God. God is the Beginning and the End, the Aleph and the Tau, the Alpha and the Omega.
In response to your statement, "So...God didn't know who would be elect...then one 'day' he suddenly decided to elect a bunch of folks to salvation, and damn the rest..."
Could it be that God always knew who the elect are?
Could it be that for so long as God was in existence (that is, eternally), so too it was determined whom the elect would be. I think this notion goes hand-in-hand with the purpose of man's existence. Why did God create anything at all in the first place? Why is it that God created man, and created him in his own image? Is it the case that for eternity there was only God and not man, and yet for eternity there will be God and man? Seeing as how we will be united with our maker as a bride with a bridegroom, it seems reasonable to me that the eternal determination of which beings would be with God for eternity is as eternally firmly established as God himself.
So what is the purpose of the rest of humanity that will not be with God?
Surely, hasn't God likened humanity unto a wheat plant? There is the part which is the fruit and there is the part which is the chaff. The fruit is for God, the chaff is to be burned. The righteous are the fruit, the wicked are like chaff and shall be burned.
We are God's plants, intended for his pleasure. He plants us, waters us and causes us to grow. The spiritual seed that comes into our life and makes us to live is God's Word. God sent the spirit of his Son (aka the Word of God) to live in our hearts. By the Holy Spirit we are born again, begotten of God. Our whole lives are of his life. He gave us birth, lives in us and will be united with us for eternity. If God, who is eternal, gave us birth and lives in us, then are we not also eternal, and hasn't our existence been intertwined with our maker from all eternity? I'm not saying that we are on equal par with God, nor that we existed eternally. But I am saying that since God is eternal and his eternal purpose was to create mankind and then be with man forever, then it makes sense that it was eternally determined who would be with him. I say "determined" for lack of a better term. What I mean is that the lives of the elect are inseparably woven into God's fabric of eternity. There was never a time when one became elect. The elect always were elect.
It seems to me that this makes Christ's sacrifice like pixie dust. (I am illustrating, not mocking, here) If a flake of pixie dust falls on you...you can fly. Peter Pan says so.
So, if Christ's blood atoned for your sins, at least potentially, you are saved. I'm not so sure.
I don't know that that's how it works at all. I think that Christ's blood is quite able to atone for every sin ever commited by every human being. A few "lightweights" like Athanasius and Gregory of Nazianzus agreed with this.
When the bulls, goats, rams and lambs were sacrificed, were they sacrificed for everyone? Or were there were sacrificed for a particular people. Atonement was not made for the sins of the Babylonians, Assyrians or the Phillistines, rather for God's chosen people--Israel. It was quite a surprise to the Jews that the Christ was also the savior of Gentiles. But it was still made clear in the New Testament that his sacrifice was for a people, God's chosen people, and not just everyone. The difference was it was now a spiritual people and not just the earthly children of Israel--hence the new covenant.
I agree that Christ's blood is powerful enough to atone for every sin ever commited by every human being. But does he? Is that how God works? He could have chosen more than just Abraham. He could have given his law to more nations than just Israel. He could have done it so many different ways, but he only chooses some and not others. It doesn't sound fair but that's what's written as how he does it.
But that's the rub. What was God thinking when he elected? How can we know?
True. We can only go by what is revealed in the Scripture..."According as he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world", etc. From verses such as these Calvinists draw their conclusions I guess.
Regarding verses like John 3:16 and 1:29. That's the problem Arthur. If you need to act like a Jehovah's witness to make your system work...seems to me you might just want to rethink your system.
Heh, it's not my system. I just want to get to the bottom of this issue and am exploring some lines of thought. I may just write an equally passionate argument for free will if I have time.
This is something about which my mind is not made up. Now, if we're talking about a 6 days creation on the other hand... well, y'know
Calvin knew about those arguments. Even he rejected them. The Bible says what it says.
Yes, I read somewhere that some of Calvin's followers tried to out-Calvin Calvin. I'm sure it happens to this day.
Arthur