You can preach the Gospel, but as Ref admitted below, under Calvinism you simply cannot consistently (truthfully?) say to any specific person, or to yourself for that matter, that Christ died for you. You can say that Christ died for sinners, for the elect, etc., but you cannot say that any individual is one for whom Christ died.
However, scripture says ...
And he said to them, Go into all the world and proclaim the gospel to the whole creation. Whoever believes and is baptized will be saved, but whoever does not believe will be condemned.(Mark 16:15-16, ESV)
LOL! The most ironic thing about the above response is that you post a passage which refutes your view, and does so specifically. That passage from Mark says, "Preach it to everyone and
the ones that believe and are baptized will be saved." It doesn't say, "Preach it to everyone and, regardless of whether they believe, Christ still died for them." Um....huh? That makes zero sense and as smart as you are I am confused on how you even couple that passage with your view. You should run and hide when you see that passage. It's in direct contrast to your view, and it's not even difficult to see that.
The glory of the Gospel is that Christ died for His sheep and only His sheep and it is THEM and THEM ONLY who will be justified by His vicarious atonement:
John 17:9
I am praying for them. I am not praying for the world but for those whom you have given me, for they are yours.
Well, I don't know what gospel you are referring to as THE gospel, but the Gospel of Jesus Christ is that he died for the sins of all men for all time.
No. That is the gospel of man. The Gospel of Jesus Christ, the Good News, is that
ALL for whom Christ died will be made alive with Him and He shall lose none of them. That is the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Your anti gospel is that Christ's death was impotent to accomplish anything in the lives of all who go to hell. Either that, or God's goal in the Cross wasn't the
ACTUAL salvation of a single person. Your hope relies on nothing more than yourself, for you can only contend that it is when you added your works to the atonement of Christ that it becomes efficacious in atoning for your iniquity. As I've seen with man centered theology for years, that the one who "accepts Christ as his Savior" be glorified is
FAR more important than that God sovereignly presides over His creation and, out of the mercy of His sweet benevolence, deigns to rescue a portion of them from their justifiable fate of condemnation.
Somehow, it doesn't seem to be very good news to say to someone, in effect ...
"Christ might have died for you! That is, if you turn out to be one of his elect, which you can never know for sure until you die."
And here you show nothing more than your ignorance. Do you not realize that some of the most prolific evangelists in history have been those who believe in the specific nature of the atonement? Further, it is your ilk that must contend that someone is not a part of the family of God until
they do some identifiable work of reconciliation, i.e., ask God in to your heart, say the "sinner's prayer," submit to God, allow God in to your life, etc, etc, etc, yada, yada, yada, ad naseum. We, on the other hand, assume
ALL people are God's elect and that we will likely never know who was truly a false believer. We know there are some that will fool others. But, as we are not God, we do not know whether someone's faith is genuine nor are we the ones that make someone stand or fall.
Without even realizing it, you accuse me of something that is far less damning than the tripe you publically embrace. You perceive my understanding of the Gospel to be reflected in this type of evangelical outreach:
"Christ
might have died for you! That is, if you turn out to be one of his elect, which you can never know for sure until you die."
That is your characterization of my method. Your's on the other hand, is far less noteworthy:
"Hey, take comfort. Christ absolutely died for you. Now, you should know that, well, there are many people for whom Christ died that still end up in hell. So, even though I can happily tell you that Christ most assuredly died for you, you might still end up in hell. Um...yeah...I know that last part isn't very comforting but, hey, at least He died for you! Woo hoo!"
Yeah. That's better. Pshhht...
You're falsely conflating universal atonement with universal salvation.
The sins of those who will be in hell are just as forgiven as those who will be in heaven. They just don't believe it, and thus have no saving faith in Christ alone that receives the salvation given freely by God.
Wow...just when I thought this couldn't get any weirder...
So, now, I'm to believe that the people in hell are forgiven but, because they don't believe in Christ, they're going to burn in hell. Got it:
Brian Regan on Reading - YouTube
Your view about forgiven people in hell starts at 50 seconds into the vid. My response starts at 1:20. Your own comments are a far bigger indictment against yourself than I could level.
Forgiven people in hell? Seriously? That doesn't even make
you feel ridiculous?
If your father leaves you a million dollars, yet you refuse to ever access the account or participate in your family you have effectively disinherited yourself and prevented yourself from benefiting from family membership.
Maybe. But you didn't "effectively" make yourself not a millionaire. Either way, this, like the rest of your post, is nonsensical and is in no way a parallel to Scriptures revelation about the scope of the atonement. A better analogy, using your own silly parameters, is this:
You owe your bank 1 billion dollars. You have zilch. The bank, being the bank, knows you have no money. This crime warrants death. Instead of killing you, the bank manager removes 1 billion dollars of his own money and pays your debt to the bank. He doesn't pay it to you. He pays it to the bank. So, whether you "don't access the account" is irrelevent. You can't access the account. It's not your account. It's the banks account.
Likewise, Christ died for the sins of all and rose for their justification, but those who reject his gifts and promises do not and cannot enjoy the benefits they bring.
Why don't we just tell it like it is. In your view, the efficacy of Christ's death is determined by the creation. In your view, God desired to save everyone without exception, sent His Son to facilitate that very thing, and then, because of the all mighty creation, failed, and now will spend eternity weeping and gnashing his divine teeth in sorrow. Yeah. Really glorifying. Good luck with that.
Thankfully, Scripture clearly tells a different story. Christ died for the sins of all who
WILL BE saved, and them only, and His atoning work exactly accomplishes what He intended it to and all He desired to save by His work on the Cross
WILL BE saved by His work on the Cross.
Ahhhhhhh....the peace that the truth brings. It, more than anything else is truly is a comfort.