That quote says 'life'. Stop interpreting it to suit your own perspectives and then claiming that you only ever take a literal reading.
If you believe in original sin, maybe. I'm neither a Catholic nor a Calivinist and I don't accept such a blatant supernatural control mechanism.
Actually, Original Sin has frighteningly little to do with it, unless you believe you yourself are perfect. Otherwise you* have offended an eternal being and so would deserve eternal punishment unless you are forgiven.
*"You" is not referencing Arakhor directly, but can refer to literally anyone on the planet, including yours truly.
Yes, and I pray you heed those goings on, as it is the Spirit, and our time is limited.
And the Lord said, My spirit shall not always strive with man, for that he also is flesh
Look, I'm not even a Christian. My point is simply that virtually every Christian I've met thinks that 90+% of humanity will be eternally, "pornographically" ( good word

) tortured in hell, and that several famous Christian thinkers have expressed the idea that the primary purpose of this is to act as salvation porn for the Elect. You're the first Christian I've ever come across who doesn't, actually. Other people avoid describing it by saying it is far too horrible to be described.
If I recall, ParkCungHee is a Catholic, although I couldn't tell you how orthodox. I do know Catholics believe in Hell, but I don't think they believe God actually torments anyone there, so much as the torment is being completely separated from God (As an Evangelical this explanation also makes a lot of sense to me although obviously only God knows for sure.)
As for Calvinism, it arises naturally from the idea that God controls everything. It's either Calvinism or something awfully like Calvinism if it's anything.
I'm impressed that a non-Christian who doesn't study theology for a living even knows what Calvinism
is
That said, what you are saying isn't even what most Calvinists would say. I have two Calvinist parents, and neither of them would take issue with statements like "God loves everyone" or "God doesn't want people to go to Hell."
That's actually a doctrinal difference between something called
supralapsarianism and
infralapsarianism. As I understand it, in Supralapsarianism, the beginning of the Earth goes something like this:
1. God elects who will go to Heaven, and who will go to Hell.
2. God creates the world.
3. The Fall.
4. God provides Salvation only for the elect. The Fall was God's tool to ensure the reprobate do not accept him.
Whereas the Infralapsarian process goes more like this.
1. God creates the world.
2. The Fall.
3. God elects who will go to Heaven, but
does not actively predestine anyone to Hell. The reprobate, those who were not chosen, will choose Hell for themselves.
4. God provides Salvation only for the elect (An alternate Calvinistic view is the 4-point view which rejects limited atonement and say God provides the possibility for Salvation for all, but the non-elect will still choose Hell.)
For the record, depending on who you ask, I'm either a four-point Calvinist or a one-point Calvinist. The way I look at it is that somehow God is soveregn over all things, but man somehow really has a choice. Most Calvinists would agree with that, but will spend more time trying to explain how it works. Arminians, again, would often agree with this, but would spend more time trying to explain how it works. While I do enjoy debate, I usually just debate the opposite side as whoever I'm debating, since I'm very "On the fence" as it goes.
Here's the thing for me:
Supralapsarianism is definitely false because that would mean God is unjust. You could be right, philosophically, about the whole omnibenevolence thing, but God's character is revealed to us in Scripture, which is clear we are damned for our sins, and not merely because we were predestined to Hell. In fact, there's literally nothing in the Scriptures that talks about people being predestined to Hell. There are scriptures about people being sent there, and Scriptures about people being predestined as God's people (Ephesians 2) but I don't think there are any Scriptures whatsoever that actually describe anyone being predestined to Hell. So basically, God wouldn't elect people for Hell who hadn't yet sinned. Its simply unjust.
Now, there's a bit of dispute about something called "Federal Headship." The view basically means that everyone deserves Hell for Adam's sin, rather than only their own personal sins. I think you pretty much have to accept that in order to accept Calvinism, and there is Biblical evidence for it, although I'm not 100% convinced. I do know, however, that our Original Sins do deprave us to a point where we cannot be righteous without God's help (Romans 3:10-11.)
Infralapsarianism might not seem much better, but it would be just because God is, first of all, not predestining anyone to Hell (Double Predestination, which is what you were advocating for) but secondly, because even if he did, those people would actually have been guilty already. A judge can sentence a guilty person to death, but not until he's guilty, otherwise its unjust. The Bible does seem to teach that our consciences were God-given (Texts in Romans talking about Gentiles being a "Law unto themselves") so that God would so blatantly be different from them wouldn't make sense to me. He is eternal, and so the penalty for defying him is infinite, but he doesn't punish innocent people (there just aren't any, anymore

)
I personally lie somewhere in between, although I'm still doing some theological inquiry on the subject. As an unbeliever, just realize that you DO have a choice and you won't be able to plead innocence because you were somehow unable to believe.
Another word game. If God is God then he planned everything by definition. The fall couldn't possibly have been an accident.
"Accident." No. I personally think God allowed it because he wanted to give Adam a choice, rather than making him a robot. I think some more hardcore Calvinists might take issue with that proposition though. Some might not, however, I know at least some of the Calvinists I know IRL admit that Adam and Eve are somewhat tricky for their predestination theology, since they had to have had free will.
I still maintain that nobody actually thinks Anne Frank repented at the last moment. Nobody would put their Vegas money on it. Entertaining that thought is a rhetorical dodge to avoid having to say "Yes, my eternally loving God is/will eventually begin tormenting Anne Frank for infinity billion years." I understand that nobody deliberately leads with this fact, but they tend to believe it, don't they?
I didn't say she did. I said it was
possible.
I mean no personal offense to you GhostWriter16. I am just expressing my take on the whole affair.
You seem like a decent fellow so don't think I personally dislike you.
I wasn't offended. I just think that to present Supralapsarian Calvinism as
The Biblical view is a bit crazy when even among Evangelical Christians there is so much debate on the subject. I've seen some people think that Calvinism is absolutely inseparable from the text and others say its unable to be placed into the text. I still think its a bit debatable. But you won't find double predestination ANYWHERE in the text, so I'd advise you not to present the Biblical God that way unless you can find evidence of it.
I hope the fact that I showed you the destinction (Between double predestination and regular predestination) will get you to look at it again.
No worries
Because it was neccasary that the Wrath Of God that we deserve come on someone.Jesus was perfect.He had never sinned and still never has.He was the only One who, being put do death, could atone for all sin through His death, becasue He was perfect.There had to be someone innocent that could take the punishment that we all deserve so we could be saved.Jesus did that.And if you don't accept what He did, then there is no way you will ever get to Heaven.Please see my earlier post for more information.
And, like I said earlier, God doesn't want anyone to go to Hell.By being born sinners(which all humans are naturally born that way)we were automatically on our way to Hell.So if God wanted us to go to Hell, then why would He send His Son to die so that we would have a way to escape it?
He made a way to escape Hell.So if you refuse to accept what Jesus has done in giving His Life for your sins, then you will not make it to Heaven, and it will be no one's fault but your own.
I wish all of you would accept Jesus and what He did for you, if you have not already.We are all born sinners, because Adam and Eve, the first humans, disobeyed God, and since we come from them, we are like them-sinners.We all owed a sin dept.Jesus paid it.
So please, accept what He has done for you.Pray to God, and acknowlodge to Him that you are a sinner, which we all are, unless you have accepted Him.Ask God for forgiveness, and make known to God that you accept the Sacrifice of His Son for to save us.And, like I said, if you don't accept Him, you will not make it to Heaven.Not because I said it, but because the Bible, which is God's Word, says it.
I cannot save you, and no one else can, but only Jesus could, by giving His life for us all.
Please, just accept it.
And if you do accept it, read the Bible and obey it, and go to a church that teaches what the Bible says.

standing up for our faith
