From my experience, Arminians avoid these verses. But these verses are the crux of God's sovereignty and Calvinism. They deal, not only with God's election, but they deal with grace by God's mercy rather than man's works.
They can be illustrated by the parable of the worker in Matthew 20 where Jesus tells us about God's sovereignty through the perspective of an employer. These verses give us the following truths:
1) That an employer can hire and fire whomever he wants
2) That an employer doesn't have to hire everyone qualified for the job
3) That its none of the business of the employees how the employer treats other workers
4) He who wants to be first will be last and the last will be first
5) That the employer, not the employees, determines who has the employer's favor for whatever reason the employer wants
6) That the employees think they are qualified to run the business of the employer rather than the employer.
For starters. This illustrates God's sovereign choice in election perfectly. None of us deserves heaven, so God electing even one person for heaven is a gift, not an entitlement. But like the parable of the workers, the sinful nature says; "That's not fair! We should be able to decide who goes to heaven and who goes to hell so God should give us the choice, not make it Himself."
But the Spirit of God says; "I am the almighty and I decide who gets to be in my kingdom and it's not by man's desire, effort or works so no one may boast before me."
So man's sinful nature is all about "me." God's nature is all about God. So verse 15 in the parable of the worker: "Dont I have the right to do what i want with my money? Or are you envious because I am generous?" demonstrates that it's envy when God determines whom He wants His elect to be instead of acknowledging that God is sovereign and only He can establish the criteria on which to base who enters His kingdom. But the beauty of God's election is that since no one knows who God's elect are, then salvation is open to anyone who wants it. That reconciles the whole bible together.
They can be illustrated by the parable of the worker in Matthew 20 where Jesus tells us about God's sovereignty through the perspective of an employer. These verses give us the following truths:
1) That an employer can hire and fire whomever he wants
2) That an employer doesn't have to hire everyone qualified for the job
3) That its none of the business of the employees how the employer treats other workers
4) He who wants to be first will be last and the last will be first
5) That the employer, not the employees, determines who has the employer's favor for whatever reason the employer wants
6) That the employees think they are qualified to run the business of the employer rather than the employer.
For starters. This illustrates God's sovereign choice in election perfectly. None of us deserves heaven, so God electing even one person for heaven is a gift, not an entitlement. But like the parable of the workers, the sinful nature says; "That's not fair! We should be able to decide who goes to heaven and who goes to hell so God should give us the choice, not make it Himself."
But the Spirit of God says; "I am the almighty and I decide who gets to be in my kingdom and it's not by man's desire, effort or works so no one may boast before me."
So man's sinful nature is all about "me." God's nature is all about God. So verse 15 in the parable of the worker: "Dont I have the right to do what i want with my money? Or are you envious because I am generous?" demonstrates that it's envy when God determines whom He wants His elect to be instead of acknowledging that God is sovereign and only He can establish the criteria on which to base who enters His kingdom. But the beauty of God's election is that since no one knows who God's elect are, then salvation is open to anyone who wants it. That reconciles the whole bible together.