I see a pile of terms that aren't in my gospel. That's the difference between me and you. In 1987 I decided to devote my time to studying Paul's gospel and working to understand that. Since that time I haven't cared about doctrines that were developed after the book of Revelation was written.
I will disclose that I did spend a few months reviewing the earliest Catholic writings because I was debating Catholics who were clamoring to use them in our spirited discussions.
Your terms are only useful to me as recreational discussion. Conditional election for instance. There is no such thing so far as the gospel is concerned. Neither is justification objective. Everyone was justified when Jesus died.
Everything I believe is based solely on the views of Paul. I allow for the use of the term Arminian as an extra-Biblical term for myself because it is the one that is the best fit.
"Neither is justification objective. Everyone was justified when Jesus died."
You just described what objective justification is. It's that by Christ's death all are justified. That's Romans 5:18.
We call it objective justification in contrast to subjective justification, because Scripture regularly speaks of subjective justification. Subjective justification is the justification that is ours by faith.
Objective justification is called objective because it is what Christ has objectively done and accomplished.
Subjective justification is called subjective because it refers to the individual receiving what Christ has done and accomplished.
Why are these terms important? For the purpose of clarity. Paul says all were justified in Romans 5:18, but elsewhere speaks of justification by faith. So is everyone justified without faith, or is the one who has faith justified? The answer is the latter, and yet the work of Christ is perfect, done, accomplished, for all.
And such faith is to be confessed not as a power or work or ability of man and his fallen sinful will (which despises God and which seeks only after its own way); but as the gift of God.
So even when we say "Justified by faith" we mean "justified by God who gives us faith". And thus we must always look outside of ourselves to the external word of God.
The external word of God--preached, proclaimed, and in the Sacraments.
I did not come to believe on my own, and then get saved by believing and confessing theological propositions.
I was given faith by God by His saving word, and out from this faith comes belief, confession, etc.
I believe with my heart and confess with my mouth that Jesus Christ is Lord and that God raised Him up from the dead because the word which was preached to me made me a believer--it worked and made faith in my heart. God did that.
So if you ask me "When did you get saved?" I will never answer "When I did this" because I can't. That would be boasting in my works. So when was I saved? I was saved two thousand years ago on a hill outside of Jerusalem called Golgotha. I was saved when my parents told me the Gospel in simplest terms while I was still wearing diapers. I was saved when I was washed in the holy waters of Baptism in the name of the Father, Son, and the Holy Spirit. I am saved when Christ gives away to me His very bodily flesh and blood in the Lord's Supper.
My salvation is, past, present, future, outside of me and in Christ, and in the works of Christ, and in the word of Christ. All of which is mine as pure grace, given to me by the external word. I am saved because God comes to me--He comes to me in Word and Sacrament.
If I judge my salvation by any standard other than the word itself, that is, the holy Gospel then I judge my salvation on the basis of the Law--in which there is only condemnation and death.
It is only the Gospel which proclaims to me, "There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus." In myself, in my works, in my abilities, in my thoughts, in all my ways there is only dead bones and dead skin slowly decaying, slowly succumbing to the existential dread of my own mortality, and all my wretched and disordered passions rage. The life, therefore, which I have received from God--that life which shall truly last, because it is in Jesus Christ who conquered death and sin--is mine as pure gift.
I am dirty.
I am impure.
I am a sinner.
I am dirty for I have many sins.
I am impure for I am filthy with sin.
I am a sinner, for I am dirty and impure, a transgressor of God's commandment.
And yet, I belong to Jesus Christ. Because
He says so.
-CryptoLutheran