Sure. Calvin thought that the Fall and sin was part of God's plan. I don't see any way to avoid that, given classical assumptions about God. Was it a surprise? Was he unable to create Adam and Eve such that they would avoid sin? I don't see any way to avoid this kind of thing without simply obsuring the argument or moving to some kind of open theism. I'm inclined towards open theism myself.So you do not believe that Calvin was a supralapsarian?
To continue where I left off, the problem with the view that Calvin sees reprobation as merely a passing over is the fact that for Calvin God is the author of sin, and this is precisely the point at which many Calvinists distance themselves from Calvin. For example:
"…how foolish and frail is the support of divine justice afforded by the suggestion that evils come to be, not by His will but by His permission…It is a quite frivolous refuge to say that God otiosely permits them, when Scripture shows Him not only willing, but the author of them..." (John Calvin, “The Eternal Predestination of God,” 10:11)And from earlier in the thread:
The supralapsarian / infralapsarian distinction is on the logical order of decrees. Both assume that God decreed everthing. I know the intent of infralaparian thought is to avoid making God the "author of sin", whatever that means, but i'm not convinced that it actually does that. And that argument was after Calvin. You can try to fit him into it, but that may not be accurate.
Anyway, as far as I'm concerned the combination of omnipotence and omniscience (which assumes that the future is knowable by God) makes God the author of sin, no matter what spin you try to put on it. I might note that author does not mean source. Nobody believes that. I mean author in the sense of the author of a book, that he put it in his plan.
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