Are you sure about that?
Ro 9:18 - "Therefore, God has mercy (salvation) on whom he wants to have mercy,
and he hardens (damnation) whom he wants to harden."
Ro 9:27 - "only the remnant will be saved."
Ro 9:30-33 - "the Gentiles, who did not pursue righteousness, have obtained it, a righteousness that is by faith (salvation);
but Israel who pursued it by a law of righteousness, has not obtained it. Why not? Because they pursued it not by faith (damnation) but as if it were by works.
It is most definitely about salvation and damnation, both of which are personal.
Every man is given a chance to be saved.
How else can you explain 2 Peter 3:9 , God wants all to come to repentance, so, He is, therefore, patient, 'that none should perish.'
How many times does God use the word, 'perish,' in Scripture?
Does 'persish' mean 'die,' or, 'rot.' Is their a difference?
By virtue of the word 'perish,' we have limited atonement being a spiritual truth.
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Nile:
So the beginning point would be the two opposing interpretations of the Biblical gospel.
1) one is of a God who saves,
2) the other is of a God who enables man to save himself, by choosing to believe.
One makes salvation depend on the work of God, the other on the work/choice of man. One regards faith as part of God's gift of salvation, the other as man's own contribution to salvation by his choice. One gives all the glory of saving believers to God, the other divides the praise between (as the theologian put it) God who built the machinery of salvation, and man, who by believing operates it.
However, the Bible presents God as the whole world's Maker and King, the Creator who is Lord, working all things after the counsel of his own will. The Biblical perspective is a God-centered outlook, which sees the Creator as the source, and means, and end, of everything that is, both in nature and in grace. The whole range of processes and events that take place in the history of God's world are simply the outworking of God's great pre-ordained plan for his creatures and his church. The Bible presents God as sovereign everywhere, including salvation.
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Yes, God is sovereign but man makes His mind (and heart) available to accept Him . The Lord leads, but we MUST CHOOSE to follow His leading "...you follow Me." John 21:22
God causes us (gives us a reason) to believe, and, typically, it takes a pretty dire circumstance to get us to.WAKE UP! to His love for us.
So, YES! God saves us, draws us near, causes us to see Him, but God's given man the ability, capacity, to choose Him. He asks us to choose His salvation AFTER He first has chosen us. Right, Scripture, 'You haven't chose Me, I've chosen you.'
So, this is where it gets tricky and controversial, but I don't see why it needs to be. God gives us eternal life, we surely can't send ourselves to.Heaven after we die, God must do it, as Rickshafe said, by His power. It's ALL by His power, again, as Rickshafe said.
But, after we are saved, WE HAVE THE POWER to serve Him or not. That is our choice.
Will we follow His leading, including the understanding of His power in us and what that truly means, what we can do to give glory to God, what fruit we can produce for Him, which all comes by faith He's given us and through faith that we USE for Hisvwork, being that Sfripture says we are His workmanship.
We are with atonement for doing these things and those who fully understand God's grace is through faith will be redeemed when they die.