Again, a choice only exists when you have two or more options to choose from, like choosing between option A and option B. On the strange planet of Calvinism, when believing the gospel becomes the inevitable conclusion after being made spiritually alive with no real alternative available, it is no longer a choice but a forced outcome. Let me help illustrate this in a real world example so you can see what I mean.
Take a robot that has been programmed to walk into a store and buy a particular item. It carries out its code step by step. It never pauses to weigh other options because it has never been given any programming to do anything different. There is zero possibility of choosing not to buy the product. When the task is finished, no one would honestly claim the robot made a real choice. It only performed the one action it was built to perform. A real choice requires the genuine ability to go in another direction.
Now imagine a robot programmed to kill a specific human being. It has no alternative instructions that would allow it to refuse, hesitate, or spare that person. It simply carries out the command it was built to fulfill. To then put that robot on trial for murder after it killed a human being while executing its programming would make no sense. The robot never had the ability to do anything other than what it was programmed to do. That is why the Calvinistic idea of God condemning people for actions they were incapable of resisting makes the entire system feel unreasonable. If there is no real capacity to choose otherwise, then holding someone morally responsible becomes as nonsensical as blaming a robot for its programming.
Sure, you can say we all sinned in Adam. I accept that to a degree myself. We enter this world in a fallen condition where every single one of us needs a Savior, Jesus Christ. Even so, Scripture also speaks very plainly that each person will answer for their own sins in this life unless they believe the gospel in 1 Corinthians 15:1 to 4, call upon the name of the Lord, and forsake their evil ways. The Bible does not treat us like puppets or programmed machines. God calls, He opens the heart so we can understand the truth, and then He rightly holds us responsible for whether we embrace or reject the grace He offers through His Son.
Scripture is very clear about this. God calls all people everywhere to repent and believe. Yet Calvinists tend to view God as deterministic, as if He is the only true actor and everyone else is simply carrying out what was unavoidable from the beginning. The Bible presents a God who genuinely invites, warns, and pleads with sinners. He desires all to come to repentance and live. He does not treat us like robots locked into a preset line of code. The repeated emphasis on believing, repenting, and turning to the Lord actually means something. It assumes a real response is possible.
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So, you cannot believe that God's will is free, can you, since he can never choose option "B" since by nature he's strictly option "A" (good, righteous and holy) and cannot sin?