I never said that, so your question is quite ridiculous.
Of course the Holy Spirit convicts of sin. And believing comes from hearing the gospel, according to the Bible. Read Romans 10:14-16. And man believes from the heart. That means his/her own heart. Rom 10:9.
More ridiculous questions.
I guess you just don't grasp that God's holding man accountable proves beyond question/doubt that man is FREE to believe or reject what God says.
According to Calvinism, man is lowered to the status of a puppet or robot. And you probably aren't able to see that either.
Why does man's freedom to believe or reject scare Calvinists so much? Or is it just offending to them?
The idea that God unilaterally chose who would believe and therefore be saved is really just a very arrogant idea.
It allows the "chosen one" to feel special and better than the NON-chosen ones.
However, of course no self respecting Calvinist would ever agree to such a charge, even though it's true.
There is no other reason to believe Calvinism's claim about election. It appeals to arrogant people. Makes them feel special or better than others.
Titus 2:11 refutes the Calvinist notion of election to salvation. "For the grace of God has appeared that offers salvation to all people."
Calvinists cannot believe this verse. For Calvinists, God's sovereign grace appears ONLY to those God chose who would believe and therefore be saved.
There is no grace in the lake of fire. Which is fine for the "lucky ones" who think that God chose them for heaven.
So, basically, God chooses unilaterally people for heaven and people for hell.
And there's no grace in that either. So either way you look at it, there is no grace in Calvinism, in spite of their very deceptive words "sovereign grace", which is no grace at all.
For Calvinists, God punishes with an eternity in the lake of fire for an action they were unable to make because God didn't allow them or cause them to believe.
The reality is that God's grace is for everyone. Romans 11:32 says so. "For God has bound everyone over to disobedience so that he may have mercy on them all."
The verse isn't talking about "the elect", as Calvinists suppose.
Of course the Holy Spirit convicts of sin. And believing comes from hearing the gospel, according to the Bible. Read Romans 10:14-16. And man believes from the heart. That means his/her own heart. Rom 10:9.
More ridiculous questions.
I guess you just don't grasp that God's holding man accountable proves beyond question/doubt that man is FREE to believe or reject what God says.
According to Calvinism, man is lowered to the status of a puppet or robot. And you probably aren't able to see that either.
Why does man's freedom to believe or reject scare Calvinists so much? Or is it just offending to them?
The idea that God unilaterally chose who would believe and therefore be saved is really just a very arrogant idea.
It allows the "chosen one" to feel special and better than the NON-chosen ones.
However, of course no self respecting Calvinist would ever agree to such a charge, even though it's true.
There is no other reason to believe Calvinism's claim about election. It appeals to arrogant people. Makes them feel special or better than others.
Titus 2:11 refutes the Calvinist notion of election to salvation. "For the grace of God has appeared that offers salvation to all people."
Calvinists cannot believe this verse. For Calvinists, God's sovereign grace appears ONLY to those God chose who would believe and therefore be saved.
There is no grace in the lake of fire. Which is fine for the "lucky ones" who think that God chose them for heaven.
So, basically, God chooses unilaterally people for heaven and people for hell.
And there's no grace in that either. So either way you look at it, there is no grace in Calvinism, in spite of their very deceptive words "sovereign grace", which is no grace at all.
For Calvinists, God punishes with an eternity in the lake of fire for an action they were unable to make because God didn't allow them or cause them to believe.
The reality is that God's grace is for everyone. Romans 11:32 says so. "For God has bound everyone over to disobedience so that he may have mercy on them all."
The verse isn't talking about "the elect", as Calvinists suppose.