No. Paul says:
“that they might be saved”
The word “might” expresses a real possibility that was offered. It does not describe a predetermined outcome in which the elect are guaranteed to be saved and the non-elect never could have been.
Paul uses “might” in the same conditional sense throughout Scripture. It means that salvation was made possible and available, but was rejected by this group.
However, you, the Calvinist, and the Anti-Free Will Proponent turn “might” into “will” for the elect and “never could” for the non-elect. That destroys the plain reading. The Elect in Calvinism cannot be said that they might be saved. According to Calvinism, the Elect are guaranteed salvation and there is no “might” about it. And in the upside-down world of Calvinism, the same holds true for the Non-Elect. There is no “might be saved” for the Non-Elect, because they never had a real chance at salvation. God never elected them for salvation at any point. The only scenario where “might” works in this verse is if salvation is conditional rather than unconditional.
Here is an example in the form of a story:
The Lost Path of the Kings
Jack Moore, Sarah Ward, and Devin Locke were seasoned Bible archaeologists who had spent years studying ancient inscriptions across the Middle East. Their latest discovery brought them deep beneath the ruins of an ancient Judean fortress. The chamber walls were covered in intricate carvings, some genuine, some deliberately deceptive.
After carefully comparing symbols on the walls with clues etched into the floor, Jack and Sarah decoded the authentic message.
Jack read it aloud.
“He who follows the true instruction might live. He who trusts the false inscription shall surely fall.”
They examined the stone floor. Some tiles bore the true symbol they had identified. Others displayed a nearly identical false marking created to mislead intruders.
Jack turned to Sarah.
“If we decoded this correctly,” he said quietly, “it might save us.”
Sarah nodded, and together they stepped onto the stones with the true symbol, moving with cautious precision.
A moment later Devin Locke entered the chamber. Devin was not only a colleague but a friend. He trusted Jack and Sarah, and he immediately recognized that they had found the safe path. He also understood that he had the exact same opportunity to follow them.
Then he saw it.
A golden goblet resting on a stone just off the true path. It was the artifact he had chased for most of his career, the one theory he had defended, the one discovery he longed to make more than any other. To Devin, this goblet was personal. It represented years of study, passion, and sacrifice.
He hesitated between two real possibilities.
He thought to himself, "Do I stick to the safe path and be with my friends?"
Or should I take the risk and achieve my life's work?
Jack called to him.
“Devin, follow us. You can make it across.”
Sarah added, her voice urgent.
“You know which symbols are genuine. Come with us.”
Devil heard them, but their words felt far away. Devin was thinking he could do both. So, he studied the floor carefully, trying to work out a way to reach the goblet without abandoning the safe path. The tile beneath his right foot bore the true symbol. He trusted that stone. He trusted the inscription. And in his mind, as long as he kept the majority of his weight on it, he would not trigger anything dangerous.
“I can do this,” he murmured.
“If my main footing stays on the correct stone, I should be fine. I just need a little balance from this one.”
Slowly, he extended his other foot toward the neighboring tile marked with the false inscription. He believed that touching it lightly—just the edge of his foot—would not matter, that the ancient mechanism would only react if he stepped off fully.
But the engineers of the old kingdom had not built their traps so generously.
The instant even the smallest part of Devin’s foot settled onto the false-marked stone, the chamber responded.
A sharp crack echoed beneath him.
The tile dropped like a sprung trapdoor.
Jack reached out in a desperate reflex.
Sarah cried out his name.
But the collapse was immediate, unstoppable.
Devin Locke plunged into the abyss below.
For a long moment, Jack and Sarah stood frozen, the echo of falling stone fading into a terrible stillness. Sarah covered her mouth as tears welled in her eyes. Jack wrapped an arm around her shoulders, steadying her as the dust slowly settled back to the floor.
Neither spoke. The weight of what had just happened pressed against both of them. Devin had been their colleague, their friend, a man who had walked beside them through deserts, ruins, and discoveries. He had stood on the brink of safety, the same chance they had, yet stepped the wrong way.
Sarah leaned into Jack’s chest, her voice trembling.
“I wish he had followed us…”
Jack closed his eyes.
“He could have. He truly could have.”
They stood together in the quiet emptiness of the chamber, letting the reality settle. Then, without rushing, they continued along the true symbols, honoring the gravity of the moment. They reached the treasure vault, not with celebration, but with the sober understanding that life and loss can hinge on a single decision.
Meaning of “Might”:
The same decoded instruction lay before all three Bible archaeologists.
Jack and Sarah accepted it fully, keeping their feet entirely on the stones marked with the true symbol.
Devin also had complete access to that same truth. He understood the markings, trusted the decoding, and knew which stones were safe.
But instead of committing to the true path, he attempted to hold to it partially while reaching toward something else. He believed he could keep most of his footing on the right symbol while letting only a small part of his foot rest on the false one. That single divided step cost him the path that might have saved him.
“Might” in the inscription meant a genuine possibility, not a fixed outcome.
Those who stayed on the true symbols might live because safety depended on their full adherence to the instruction, not a partial or divided response.
Devin lost what was available to him not because he lacked access or ability, but because he did not remain with what he knew was true.
This illustrates the core idea in 2 Thessalonians 2:10.
The offer of truth is real.
The possibility of salvation is real.
But a person must receive that truth wholeheartedly rather than turn aside, even partially, to something else that draws the heart away. God wants us, but we must embrace the love of the truth continually and completely.
Sadly, there are many believers who will be shocked in the end, not because they lacked access to truth, but because they did not hold to it with their whole heart. I wish with all sincerity that none of them would be caught off guard in that day by taking the wrong step in this life. In Christ, I love them deeply and desire only what is good and true for them.
......