the Scriptures say 'all' in some places
@prism
Actually in
several places. Flat-out, verbatim, word-for-word. And NEVER (not once, not anywhere) does Scripture state, "No, Jesus did not die for all but ONLY for some few."
Jesus' death is limited to those who believe
@prism
The
BENEFIT of such is limited to those with faith (a point no one has ever disputed and an issue entirely related to the "L" of TULIP), but His death is not limited to those who believe, you are incorrect there. Nowhere does Scripture state, "Jesus died ONLY for those who eventually will have faith."
You might be making the same mistake as these few radical, latter-day Calvinists who invented the "L" dogma did: rendering faith irrelevant and moot. No one is justified SOLELY because Christ died for them (if that were true, all would be justified - as the Calvinists who invented universalism insisted), but essential is not only the Cross but also faith. It's not either/or, it's both/and. Faith without the Cross does not lead to personal justification, the Cross without faith does not lead to personal justified. BOTH are needed.
The reason some are not personally justified is NOT that the Bible is wrong about Jesus dying for all but rather because the Bible is right about faith not being in all.
prism said:
Seems to me, this issue is fairly a moot
Sadly, no.
The only reason we know that Jesus died for ME (and you, too) is that the Bible states (often, verbatim) that He died for all people, for everyone... and therefore, me (and you). And everyone to whom we may be presenting the Gospel. This is an OBJECTIVE reality that points to an OBJECTIVE reality - The Cross and Resurrection.
IF Jesus died only for some few (maybe 1% to possibly 20%) then He probably did NOT die for you or me (odds are against it, anyway). The problem is: nowhere does the Bible list the names of those for whom Jesus died, there's nothing objective and sure about whom He died for. We are left with just our own feelings and hopes and dreams (and the odds that it's unlikely that He died for me). These radical Calvinists will ultimately insist we cannot know until we die and are met by either the Devil or Jesus because, well, God didn't list the names. We can't know if our neighbor is one of those few and thus are we being honest when we present the Gospel to them since odds are the Gospel is not for them? How can we know? How can they know? Nothing solid, nothing objective. Just our personal feelings.
Now, some will TRY to wiggle out of this by saying our FAITH confirms it. But how do we know if our neighbor has faith so that we can evangelize them? How do we know if OUR faith is from God or something we generated, how do we know that it's apprehending something that's for me and not a phantom? Thus the uber-Calvinist obsession that faith must be GENUINE (and there's no way to know if it is), the issue not being the object of faith but the GENUINESS of faith. As even my very Calvinists relatives express, this "L" is a "terror of the conscience" since there's no way to know if Jesus died for me, and it puts certainly not in Jesus but in how GENUINE my faith is (with no way to gauge that).
When taking Scriptures as a whole, it becomes clear that at least the benefits of the atonement are limited.
No one disputes that. That's NOT the issue at hand. The "L" of TULIP that is the issue here does NOT teach that the death of Jesus BENEFITS only some, it's that Jesus DIED for only some unknown, unnamed few. It's easy to defend a view if you change the view to something entirely different than the one under discussion.
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