Hi Corpselight and Johnny,
I am generally in sympathy with both of you, and find Calvinism to be largely morally and intellectually questionable. However, there are some aspects of Calvinism, I think, or certain Calvinist notions of God, that I think Universalism needs to address to be truly Biblical and theologically coherent.
Take the divine commandment theory (DCT) of ethics. Now, obviously, it would be wrong to say of any good personthat all of their actions must be good. However, if we accept the classical definition of God (which I am guessing you do?), then it becomes much harder to say that God can commit an evil action; otherwise, it would entail a contradiction. Granted, this might be evidence that the Calvinist reading of the Bible as espousing “eternal genocide” (that might be tendentious, johnny , but I think it would amt to that from a universalist point-of-view) is wrong. Yet, even Universalists have to hold to some kind of divine commandment ethics, or how do we make sense of, for example, God’s telling Abraham to kill Isaac? Perhaps that isn’t true, or isn’t a good example because Abraham didn’t actually do it, but on the face of it, the DCT seems about the only way one can explain it.
Also, if God merely wants to save all people, then you might have tied His hands, for Arminians believe that, too, but universalism isn’t necessary on that assumption, b/c some may freely reject God, although I think Thomas Talbott is correct that this becomes more implausible given an afterlife where disillusions those who reject Him. Yet, if it is even possible for some hardened person to infinitely reject God, then the Calvinist construal of the Bible affirming “unconditional election” is necessary (though obviously Calvinists would say that not all are elect). I would say that it is closer to the truth theologically and Biblically that God must save all people, if God is love (doesn’t a loving individual have to act loving? all-the-more-so if one is perfect), and if our free will is not to undermine God.
Anyway, I am not championing Calvinism as much as I am wanting to understand the coherence of universalism and Calvinism as theologies. If you would, look at Calvinism and Universalism as disinterestedly as you can (and, admittedly, this is hard to do with something you strongly believe to be wrong) to see the consistency or inconsistency of each. As deplorable as the bottom-line of Calvinism with eternal Hell for many is, it is fairly consistent given its assumptions (though these assumptions, for instance, that the atonement was limited, may be based on a poor exegesis).
I think the virtue in this is to see where Universalism might be strengthened as a theology (though there are different strains of Universalism) and, if Universalism is T, it can bear a honest comparison, even in its faults, with other theologies. IMO, it is best to be as open as possible to other theologies and assume the least, then, if (I would actually say when b/c I am confident Universalism will emerged unscathed in such an analysis) Universalism is proven T, it is indeed proven so!
So, maybe a more focused ? would be: what do you think the weak pts of Universalism are compared to Calvinism?**