Yes, He died for those who have faith. NO ONE IS DISPUTING THAT. All here - all of us, everyone of us - AGREES with John 10 and 12 and every other verse you referenced. All true. Every one of them.
And none of them state what you do, that He died ONLY for those. That He did NOT die for all as is so often stated in Scripture but rather ONLY, EXCLUSIVELY, SOLELY for some unknown few. You've not presented one Scripture that states that, as everyone here knows.
You stated, "Jesus said you do not believe because you are not my sheep."
Did Jesus say that.... or did you tell a falsehood?
Those of us, 4 and over, who can read know the answer. So do you.
When someone violates the Commandment of "Thou shalt not bear false witness" should they repent?
Jesus did not say
ONLY for the sheep. Yes or No?
If I posted "Ford makes Mustangs" does that prove that ergo Ford ONLY makes Mustangs? Yes or no?
If I posted "I love my wife" does that prove that ergo I ONLY love my wife and I don't love my kids? Yes or No?
You stated, "Jesus said they do not believe because he did not die for them."
Did you tell the truth, Jesus said "I did not die for them" Did Jesus say that? Yes or No?
When you said He said something but you prove He did not, is that lying? Yes or No?
When you tell a falsehood, should you repent for that? Yes or No?
True. Now stop the red herring. This topic is not about faith, it's about Christ's death. Stop trying to change the topic just because you have nothing to support your horrible, anti-Calvin invention.
Here are the two views you keep bringing up - over and over and over - whether the thread has anything to do with it or not.
They are:
1. Jesus died for all people
2. Jesus did NOT die for all but ONLY, EXCLUSIVELY, SOLELY for some unknown few
The monikers:
Some radical, latter-day Calvinists who actually denounced and disageed with Calvin on this point invented view #2 and also the monikers for these two views. THEY named #1 "Universal Atonement" and #2 "Limited Atonement" If you think they are inaccurate or misleading, blame those radical Calvinists who denounced Calvin for it, they invented them.
As you have been told - MANY times, over many weeks, in numerous threads, the early Christians, the Church Council, the Orthodox Church, the Catholic Church, the Anglican Church, the Lutheran Church and more teach that Jesus died for all BUT they never use these anti-Calvin guys invented monikers. I stated the Catholic embrace of this in CCC 605 and noted it just states the view, not the Calvinist name for it. And I quoted the Lutheran Confessions and noted they don't use either of these monikers. Someone quoeted the Church Council on this and noted it didn't use either moniker. Don't like the names? Don't blame us. The radicals you echo did.
Here are the two views.
1. Jesus died for all people.
Here are just a few of the Scriptures that state this view. The view echos them, verbatim.
Hebrews 2:9 But we see him who for a little while was made lower than the angels, namely Jesus, crowned with glory and honor because of the suffering of death, so that by the grace of God he might taste death
for everyone.
2 Corinthians 5:14 For the love of Christ controls us, because we have concluded this: that one has
died for all
2 Corinthians 5:15 And
he died for all
1 Timothy 2:6 Who gave himself as
a ransom for all.
There are many more.
+
This view does NOT hold that all individuals are thus forgiven or that all have personal justification since that requires a second aspect, the divine gift of faith. BOTH the CROSS and FAITH are necessary for personal justification and personal forgiveness (not ONLY the Cross ALONG). And both the Cross and Faith are 100% the work and gift of God and together they bring justification (narrow sense) to the individual. The teaching is "Jesus died for all" is NOT "all have forgiveness and personal salvation".
This view does not deny original sin, it is this: "Jesus died for all people." No Pelagianism.
This view does not state that everyone saves themselves, it states this: "Jesus died for all people" No Pelagianism.
This view does not deny faith and insist that since Christ died for all thus all are saved, it states this: "Jesus died for all people." No Pelagianism.
It is the view of the Orthodox Church, the Catholic Church, the Anglican Church, the Lutheran Church, John Calvin, and nearly all other denominations and faith communities. It was declared doctine by a Church Council in the 9th Century.
2. No, Jesus did NOT die for all people but ONLY, EXCLUSIVELY, SOLELY for some unknown few.
Here are the Scriptures that state this view:
Crickets.
+ There is a verse that says "Jesus died for the Elect" but none that say
ONLY for the Elect. And there are verses that state that Jesus died for us (Christians) but none that state
ONLY for us (indeed, see
1 John 2:2). And without the "only" the point is unsubstantiated. Apologists of this view must employ a silly logical fallacy, one illustrated by this: "Ford makes Mustangs, ergo Ford ONLY makes Mustangs." Or "Bob loves his wife, ergo he ONLY loves his wife and not his kids." Even my four year old son can see the absurdity of the logical fallacy radical, extremist Calvinists use as their apologetic for this invention. The whole apologetic has not one Scripture that states their point. It's based entirely on a logical fallacy.
+ And of course if this horrible invention is true, then no one can know if Jesus' death is for THEM (odds are, it's not). And no way to know if their trust in that death for THEM means anything at all since they can't know if it was for them (probably not).
Radical Calvinists invented this dogma in response to Arminianists (who embrace some forms of synergism and Pelagianism) and necessitates the opposition having those views. It doesn't work at all on people who aren't Arminianists. It's based on NOT ONE VERSE in Scripture (so much for Sola Scriptura) and on a fallacy that permits them to INSERT the word "only" into texts, the logical fallacy that is the entire basis of their apologetic is like this: "Ford makes Mustangs, ergo Ford ONLY makes Mustangs." Their entire apologetic rests on this logical fallacy. And the absence of any Scripture that states it.
.