Hey all, again!
The issue of universal reconciliation has popped up again in a Facebook group I’m a part of, and I’ve run across even more internal issues with Calvinism. I don’t know yet whether these have been answered and those I’ve argued with simply don’t have a broad enough grasp of their doctrine, or whether these are truly demoralizing arguments against its very foundation. If you want to add any, feel free. Anyway, here goes:
- Quality of love for the elect -
God’s providential love, and cherishment for creation, is not tied to His redemptive love, since unconditional election prescribes that the elect are not loved by any quality of their own, but simply because they are selected for it, and the distinction between they and the non-elect is in order to demonstrate His glory. But if God loves some and not all simply to demonstrate His glory, isn’t that more of a cold calculation than it is true, deep affection?
- Variableness and “shadow of turning” -
God is said to love all in a providential sense. But the issue of redemptive love eventually concerns providential love, since those not loved redemptively are not loved providentially in the end, either (whether they are still cherished as His creation or not). Thus, God’s love is limited and bound, not only in distinction between individuals, but between segments of time. God’s love doesn’t radiate indiscriminately (like the sun), but is more arbitrary.
Comeback: God’s love doesn’t radiate equally toward all creation, or else the angels would be “helped” (see Hebrews 2:16).
Response: But this is speaking of two different class of beings, which presumably would have differing qualities to receive different aspects of love (for instance, there isn’t even a question to begin with of sparrows being loved “salvifically”), and the elect are not a different “class of being” lest this again violate unconditional election.
- Sovereignty and glory -
I’ve brought this up here before I believe, but there is also the issue that if some do not repent in the end, and their hearts are too hardened to recognize and agree with God’s ordinances and ways, then they obviously do not see the merit in God’s nature or activity, and thus He does not receive His due glory in their hearts or minds, and neither is He sovereign in those same inward parts, either. There is at least one realm - or rather, many - where God remains unglorified, and trumped by sin and unrepentance.
Comeback: Unless the non-elect are banished from God’s creation as a whole and placed in some state of quasi-non-existence where their existence doesn’t count, or something.
Response: But to the extent that they exist, God has knowledge of them, and it still undoubtedly very much counts to Him. Besides, this smacks more of gnosticism and seems fairly unbiblical. For instance, in Revelation 22:14-15, the unwashed and unclean are found right outside the city gates, and clearly if there are kings bringing their glory through the entrances, the walls of the city don’t circumscribe the very bounds of existence.
- Anger at His own work -
And then there’s that ol’ classic objection that Calvinism proposes that God creates creatures prone to wickedness simply in order to damn them as a part of showing His glory and for no other reason. It would be similar to a mannequin punching bag that one creates (that, by the way, requires almost zero resistance and work for the creator to punch), simply to demonstrate one’s superiority. In the end, there is no point to it, for it is an empty display. It is quite apparent to anyone that such a superior being has no trouble punching the bag. Coming back to the Calvinist model, only humans would be unaware of this, but does this imply that God has something to prove to humans? Most Calvinists would scoff at such a statement.
Comeback: But people have free will in choosing evil over God, it is just that He selects the elect and leaves the rest for damnation. They are still accountable for their actions.
Response: But they are helpless to submit to God (total depravity), and thus God still creates creatures that are intended to be consigned to damnation by omission, so that in a very real sense they are still just punching bags to show His superiority. Their sins are not really even the issue.
- Devaluation of the atonement -
I just thought of this one as I was writing the last bit of the last one. In Calvinism, it is already decided who will and will not be saved from the foundation of the world. Thus, the status of the cross is not as the glorious determinant of salvation, but merely the vehicle through which redemptive love is carried. (Any other viable vehicle would’ve done as well.) The distinction here is subtle but I hope you catch my drift. In this viewpoint, the cross does not trump all and is not the ultimate in demonstrating God’s glory, but is of secondary importance. It is God’s election, apparently, that demonstrates God’s glory to the utmost, and the cross plays second fiddle to it. Funny then to wonder why Paul determined to “preach nothing but Christ, and Him crucified!” I have no idea what the response to this would be.
Anymore? I’m sure you guys have run up against some yourselves.
I have the Institutes of the Christian Religion on my bed which I have yet to start trying to plow through, which should be a task in itself, and one I’d have to work around my political activity, but hopefully I can penetrate it sooner or later in order to better understand the “enemy”…