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I have my theories but I'm not putting them up here. Here's the question:

Was Christ's Atonement limited? If you don't like that phrasing Was Christ's atonement particular (to specific individuals)?

If so, say how and if not, say why.

Tags: atonement, calvinism, limited

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R_Booth said:
I put this here so you won't miss it:

So crazy, you think that we could be automotons? since LA is only for the elect, and the elect were chosen before the foundations of the world, and that Christs atonment is only for the elect? So that it doesn't really matter how we live, for if we are trully of the "elect" then we got a "go directly to heaven" card" and it doesn't really matter whether we yield to the Spirit or not, because, hey - we are the "Elect"?



No.

Ha! I had to laugh when I read this because the way I see it, un-limited atonement gives everyone a "go directly to heaven" card. :-P

No we still must have faith. The elect are the ones whom respond in faith to the prompting of the Holy Spirit in their lives. Continuing in that faith.

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Heaven needn't have a capacity limit, one would think. But according to the pre-election hypothesis, God, by not electing all, artificially limits the population. We don't know what criterion He goes by unless it has something to do with his foreknowledge or his self glory. And since by that hypothesis God does not extend his grace to everyone to be saved, Christ could not atone for everyone or He would be working against God's aims.

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They'd say Romans 9. =)

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Would choosing God be good, neutral or evil?

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I would venture a guess that there are very few people who answer this question and have read Calvin's Institutes.

Here is what I believe based on the scriptures. The atonement is only limited in the sense that not every human being reaps the benefits of the atonement. Christ's sacrifice is once for all and there is no need for another sacrifice if God at this moment became a universalist. The offer is there to the entire world. But! The entire world will not be saved. There will be many who do not, to their own demise, avail themselves of that sacrifice.

If you read Calvin's wittings that is what he believed as well. There were many times I heard many people say that Christ only died for the saved and that His blood would have been wasted if he died for everyone and not everyone was saved. The mistake in that is thinking that if someone isn't saved then Christ's blood being spilled for them is a waste. The very thing that could save them will condemn them. Not a drop is wasted. It is like the last plague in Exodus. The blood would have saved anyone Jew or Egyptian and anyone who didn't have it on their door posts and lintels would not have been spared. Not a drop of the blood was wasted.

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The key point here is that election is unconditional, not that God does not have foreknowledge. The contrast is with the claim that God elected based (conditioned) on foreknowledge that the elect would believe. Romans 9 comes in starting with verse 11: Romans 9:11-16 even before they were born or had done anything good or bad (so that God's purpose in election would stand, not by works but by his calling) — it was said to her, "The older will serve the younger," just as it is written: "Jacob I loved, but Esau I hated." What shall we say then? Is there injustice with God? Absolutely not! For he says to Moses: "I will have mercy on whom I have mercy, and I will have compassion on whom I have compassion." So then, it does not depend on human desire or exertion, but on God who shows mercy. If election depended on God's foreknowledge of belief then it would not be unconditional and would depend on the the one who "desires or exerts".


Seraphim Walters said:
Question: Do Reformed/Calvinist folk really hold the position I've bolded below?

and if they do, scriptural support?

Seraphim

ScottL said:
This is the question you pose:
But for the reformed person, they know that the particular atonement for the elect was because God elected them before the foundation of the world not based upon any foreknowledge of their decision.

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The only thing that passage tells us is that God chooses. And it's not based on our works.

And that's where the unconditional is. Beyond works, this passage also says that God's choice is not conditioned on the "one who wills", so the choice is not because God foresaw that someone will say "yes". This passage also looks at the argument that unconditional election makes people not responsible for their choices in vv 19-21.

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