well I've just listened to a Calvinist who says God wills his people to make the right choice. I have believed this not knowing it was even a Calvinist belief.
So I wonder how accurate the believe is about Calvinists, where people say Calvinists believe God created evil so people could live in sin, who haven't been chosen.
I'm not seeing where that has come from, from a Calvinist perspective.
Calvinists, those who believe as Calvin taught, assert that God irresistibly decreed from eternity past
whatsoever comes to pass and whatsoever comes to pass maximises His glory. That includes every evil thing that is done.
In order to post hoc rationalise the logical corrollary of this theological presupposition, and explain away God's commands to men not to do evil, when He has decreed and brings to pass all evil, Calvinists need to invent two wills for God, His
decretive will (what He
decreed from eternity past that creature
will do: that all the evil be done) and his
preceptive will (what he
commands in precepts that men
should do, even though men cannot do it because He has irresististibly ordained them to do the evil they end up doing.)
By this sophistry, Calvinists somehow claim to absolve God from being the unholy inventor and author of evil.
The Bible does not mention the concepts of God having contradictory decretive and preceptive wills, but Calvin invented the concepts to back-fill ethical holes in His flawed systematic.
This stems from Calvin's authoritarian nature which He imposed onto God in the Bible, a concept of sovereignty where a sovereign demands and imposes His will on every person and atom in creation in every second of time.