Random or Conditional
In another thread we were talking about salvation being possibly random to some extent.
The Calvinist seemed to argue that with their theology salvation is not random but the result of Gods choice, God has merciful Love for some and does not have merciful love for others? (If this is not right please correct me.)
When I ask about Gods selection process for determining who will and wont be saved I get a lot of inconsistency, but no one likes the idea of it being a random selection by God.
The problem I am seeing: If Gods selection for extending merciful Love to people is not random than it is conditional and if it is conditional than Gods merciful Love is conditional and not unconditional?
So even if we do not know the condition for Gods selection of the elect (extending Merciful Love), if it is not done randomly, than Gods Love is not unconditional?
Armenians get around this issue by saying Gods Love is totally unconditional extended to everyone and the condition is mans willingness to humbly accept or reject Gods charity.
In another thread we were talking about salvation being possibly random to some extent.
The Calvinist seemed to argue that with their theology salvation is not random but the result of Gods choice, God has merciful Love for some and does not have merciful love for others? (If this is not right please correct me.)
When I ask about Gods selection process for determining who will and wont be saved I get a lot of inconsistency, but no one likes the idea of it being a random selection by God.
The problem I am seeing: If Gods selection for extending merciful Love to people is not random than it is conditional and if it is conditional than Gods merciful Love is conditional and not unconditional?
So even if we do not know the condition for Gods selection of the elect (extending Merciful Love), if it is not done randomly, than Gods Love is not unconditional?
Armenians get around this issue by saying Gods Love is totally unconditional extended to everyone and the condition is mans willingness to humbly accept or reject Gods charity.