If Jesus died for those in hell (the majority of souls), then He died for those in vain.
@prism
A non sequiter.
No one has ever claimed that His death/resurrection is EFFECTUAL for everyone. Scripture nowhere remotely states that either. But the Bible DOES state that Jesus died for all people (yes, that includes those who have no faith and thus don't benefit from it) - it states that repeatedly, verbatim, literally, flat-out, word-for-word. It's one of the most clear teachings in all of the Bible. And I doubt God is wrong on that.
It's true that not everyone will go to heaven. But that reality is NOT because the Bible is wrong when it repeatedly, verbatim states that Jesus died for all, it's because the Bible is correct when it states that faith is essential and not all have faith.
Isaiah 55:11 So shall my word be that goeth forth out of my mouth: it shall not return unto me void, but it shall accomplish that which I please, and it shall prosper in the thing whereto I sent it.
1. This is about the proclamation of His word, not the death of the messiah. This verse is irrelevant to our discussion; it's about an entirely different issue.
2. This does not state, "No, Jesus did not die for all but RATHER ONLY for _______________."
Here's what God literally, flat-out, verbatim, in black-and-white, repeatedly states:
1 John 2:2 He is the propitiation for our sins, and not for ours only but also for the sins of the whole world.
John 3:16 “For God so loved
the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.
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 "Christ Jesus, who gave himself as a ransom
for all.
There are more.
There is NOTHING in Scripture (or 1600 years of Christianity) that states that Jesus did not die for all but
ONLY for some few. The "L" is not only entirely void of any affirmation in Scripture or Christianity, but flat out
contradicts what the Bible repeatedly, literally, verbatim, word-for-word states.
Some very important things about that "L"....
1. The dogma that Jesus died ONLY for some unknown few (the "L" of TULIP) was invented by a couple of radical, latter-day Calvinists (who actually disagreed with Calvin at several critical points) who were reacting to some equally radical latter-day "free-will" Arminianists. Point-by-point, they simply said the opposite of whatever those free-will dudes stated. But the opposite of a wrong isn't necessary right (or biblical).
2. The basis of the "L" is a question: "Why would Jesus die for someone who isn't going to benefit from it?" Okay, it's fine to ask questions but questions are not proof of anything (other than the ability to ask it). God is love. Love sometimes isn't logical. Unconditional love may do things that aren't conditional or appreciated or even change things. Love isn't always reciprical or effectual. Questions aren't apologetics - in anything. And for those who believe that the Bible is the norma normans, they are irrelevant.... IRRELEVANT.
3. Undeniably, the Bible repeatedly, flat-out, verbatim, word-for-word STATES that Jesus died for all, for everyone. It does not say that all ergo are saved (indeed, it insists that FAITH is essential - and that not all have faith). It seems to be one of the most clear, most certain, most undeniable teachings in the Bible. Now, IF there were verses that flat-out stated. "Jesus died ONLY for ____________" then we'd have a problem and would need to find some way to resolve this (or simply permit the tension) but there is nothing - not one verse - that indicates that.
4. These radical, latter-day Calvinists made a very critical, very fundamental mistake (one we often see among latter-day Calvinists). It's the elimination of the role of faith, the teaching that the ONLY THING that matters in personal justification is whether Christ died for you or not. People don't go to heaven for one and only one reason: Christ did not die for them. This ignores the clear biblical teaching that faith is also necessary (
John 3:16 etc). But these Calvinists were SO anti-Arminianists that ANY mention of faith was simply eliminated so as to not appear to suggest free-will.
5. This is a
HORRIBLE, terrifying teaching. If Jesus died for ONLY some.... and this "some" is never identified.... and is likely quite few (some Calvinists put it at 1%, some as high as 20% of all humans) then how can I possibly know the He did for me? Is faith embracing something that is for me? The odds are clearly that He did NOT die for me... and what is extended to ME (by Christ, by Scripture, by Christians) is likely not FOR me, not available to me. I can never know.... but if I think it IS for me, I'm probably wrong. And Christ, Scripture and Christians are dishonest (and cruel) to suggest it is when it probably isn't (or at least there is no way to know if it is). "A terror of the conscience" as detractors call the "L" Now, some will try to get around this by saying that faith confirms this, but this just adds to the terror and uncertainty because how do I know my faith is from God and not something I created, how do I know it's "GENUINE" and from God? Which is the MESS these folks get into with "Once Saved, Always Saved" with the critical question of whether our faith is GENUINE or not; how can one know since they don't? But there is comfort is knowing that Jesus died for ALL (and therefore, for ME). These TULIP supporters must constantly question if faith is GENUINE (and of course, no one an know if it is). The ONLY certain, objective way to know that Jesus died for ME is either 1) MY full name is listed in the Bible as one for whom Jesus died or 2) Jesus died for all humans and since I'm a human, well..... There IS something real and "there" for faith to embrace, rely upon and apply, but for TULIP supporters, there's probably not.
Blessings on your Holy Week...
- Josiah
.