I haven't seen anything of his yet that did not.
There is plenty. First is infant baptism (whether correct or incorrect, Calvin differed here). Second is Calvin's idea of a Church-State union. Third is Calvin defining divine justice as the 15th century judicial philosophy in which he was trained. Fourth is the idea that God punished Jesus instead of punishing to pay our sin debt.
There is a long list of Calvin and Calvinism differing from Paul and from Scripture (whether rejecting that God will never punish the innocent or simply adding what is not there to the text).
Au contraire. . .I've studied Paul, not Calvin.
You should not study Paul. Paul did not invevent any new doctrine and when you become a disciple of Paul you divorce God's words given through Paul from the rest of Scripture.
Do those limitations apply to all of us?
Yes, they do. That is why I insist that foundational doctrines must be written in the text of Scripture. If I read "Christ bore our sins" and do mot understand how except that I add "instead of us" then it would be better to just stop and accept God's in faith Word without adding to it. Over time I'd learn how Christ bore our sins without this meaning "instead of us" (that's actually in Scripture as well). But if I lean on my understanding I'd never have moved beyond Calvinism.
Have all those who do not stand where you stand abandoned truth?
No. I just mention it because I held your position for so long, much of the time knowing nothing of John Calvin.
We can't unsee error. But if I an standing in the same theological place five years from now then that will be sad as I'd have grown stagnant in my Christian growth.
Too often I see Calvinists feast upon a diet of Calvinistic writings. These are not bad (I did and still do). But Scripture needs to be the yest of doctrine.
Calvinism tests its doctrine not against what is written but against what they believe is taught (against Calvinism). They are not alone here (we all do this to an extent).
I haven't choked on any bones of Paul yet.
We are not dealing with what Paul wrote (the words of God delivered through Paul). We ate dealing with what you believe Paul really meant but did not write. That is where we differ- I told you, I'm a biblicist. I don't want to know what somebody believes God meant, I want to know what God actually spoke to us.
When I do, you will be the first to know.
Me? No. I don't need to know. Your walk and study of God's Word is between you and God.
My only hope for you is that you be the best Christian you can be regardless of an adherence to Calvinism, Pentecostalism, Baptist doctrine, Catholicism, etc.
The danger of Calvinism (and other Christian philosophies) is that these understandings can overshadow spiritual growth in our lives. This, of course, is not necessary as there have been spiritually mature Calvinists (Spurgeon, Keller, Muller, etc). But online I've encountered many that exchange spiritual growth for cognitive growth in their chosen philosophies. Spiritual truth is important regardless of one's theological ideas.