A Response to Brendan Stupikās John Calvin and The Authorship of Evil
By Bible Researcher & Author Eli Kittim š
Mr. Brendan Stupik is a writer, a Reformed Calvinist, and a musician. As far as I can tell, he has no degrees in higher education, not even a bachelors degree, no published books or articles, and no formal Biblical training in an academic or seminary setting. Yet he excoriated me after reading one of my articles āDoes God Create Evil?: Answering the Calvinistsā in which I conclude that under Calvinism, God creates evil. He publicly criticized and rebuked me sharply and promised to formally refute my views on his blog, apologeticsrepo.wordpress.com, which he did with his article āJohn Calvin and The Authorship of Evil: A Critique and Review of Eli Kittimās Answering the Calvinists.ā I heartily disagree with Mr. Stupik on many issues relating to Calvinism, but I will nevertheless try to take his views seriously.
Stupik (no pun intended) has written a scathing review of āDoes God Create Evil?: Answering the Calvinistsā on his Wordpress Blog. In his essay, heās trying to portray my thesis as āa weak argumentā because he claims that āno textual evidence is cited to supportā my interpretation. What is more, he accuses me of āattacking a straw man.ā That is, he assumes that I create an imaginary Calvinist that is cut out of whole cloth, and then I proceed āto ārefuteā this imaginary Calvinist.ā He, therefore, concludes that mine is not a āsound refutation of Calvinism.ā These attacks are sustained throughout his post, and they sometimes become personal.Ā So, to put this matter to rest, I will present a great deal of evidence, especially from Calvinās own works.
Stupik begins his criticism by taking aim at my credentials, trying to paint a false picture of me as one who lacks writing skills, who mishandles quotations, and whose competence in literary matters must be doubtful. And yet, for those of you who donāt know me, Iām a Bible Scholar and a graduate of the Koinonia (Bible) Institute as well as the John W. Rawlings School of Divinity. Iām a native Greek speaker, fluent in Koine Greek, and I read the New Testament in the original language. I also hold a masters degree in psychology. Iāve been writing and publishing articles for over 40 years. I have published articles in numerous prestigious journals and magazines, such as the "Journal of Higher Criticism," "The American Journal of Psychoanalysis," the "Aegean Review" (which has published work by Jorge Luis Borges, Lawrence Durrell, Truman Capote, Alice Bloom), and the "International Poetry Review" (a literary translation journal), among others. Iām also an award-winning book author of āThe Little Book of Revelation: The First Coming of Jesus at the End of Days.ā Not to mention the hundreds of articles that have been posted on my blog in the past decade: https://eli-kittim.tumblr.com/
Eli Kittim is a Biblical Researcher and an Award-Winning Goodreads Author of the...
So, this type of ad hominem attack certainly doesnāt help his cause. He writes:
The ever-so frustrating lack of quotation
marks and citations once again blurs the
lines between Mr Kittim and his source
materialās words.
Stupik continues:
Mr. Eli Kittim abruptly begins his critique ā¦
with a quote from prominent reformed
theologian Dr. R.C Sproul. āThere is no
maverick molecule if God is sovereignā he
transcribes, and then, interjecting,
elaborates that āif God cannot control the
smallest things we know of in the universe,
such as the subatomic particles known as
āquarks,ā then we cannot trust him to keep
His promises.ā At first glance of the article
itself, one may be justifiably met with
confusion. Are these the words of Dr.
Sproul, or of Mr. Kittim? Granted, Dr. Sproul
has previously expounded upon his
āmaverick moleculeā catchphrase in similar
fashion, but there are no quotations, and
there is no citation!
Apparently, Stupik is not familiar with block quotes, which are offset from the main text, indented, double-spaced, and require no quotation marks. Just to give the reader an idea of Stupikās misrepresentation, hereās the actual page. Notice how R.C. Sproulās quote is very clearly distinguished from the main text by being indented and double-spaced: āDoes God Create Evil?: Answering the Calvinistsā: https://eli-kittim.tumblr.com/post/656643262452531200/does-god-create-evil-answering-the-calvinists
By Award-Winning Author Eli Kittim āā- Calvinism Has Confused God's Foreknowledge With His Sovereignty Dr. R.C. Sproul once said:
As you can see, thereās absolutely no question as to which are Dr. Sproulās words and which are mine. Moreover, famous quotes by famous authors are in the public domain. They require no citation. This smacks of underhand tactics to taint my reputation from the outsetāāso as to manipulate the readersāāand portray my essay as if it involves nothing but literary incompetence.
Furthermore, his refusal to acknowledge the obvious meaning of Dr. Sproulās statement shows a lack of familiarity with the theological literature. He writes:
Kittim, continues, āJust because God sets
the universe in motion doesnāt mean that
every detail therein is held ipso facto to be
caused by him.ā ⦠Kittim however, ā¦
provides no biblical evidence to the contrary
of omnicausality, fatalism, or determinism.
Additionally, in the aforementioned quote,
Dr. Sproul makes no such claim of
omnicausality, fatalism, or determinism;
heās simply making a point of Godās
sovereigntyā that is to say, his
omniordinance.
All these points are disingenuous and misrepresent both Dr. Sproul and Calvinism. As I will show, there is overwhelming evidence of omnicausality and theological determinism in Calvinism. And anyone familiar with Dr. Sproulāāwho has read and heard his lectures on this topicā-knows quite well that this is exactly what he means when he says āThere is no maverick molecule if God is sovereign.ā Stupik also criticizes me for introducing the doctrine of foreknowledge without sufficiently explaining it. But anyone undertaking a critical review of my work on this topic should be thoroughly steeped in this concept and should not require preliminary definitions, especially when Calvin himself rejected it as a theological alternative to his doctrine of sovereignty. Moreover, he quotes me as saying āGod could still be sovereign and yet simultaneously permit the existence of evil and free will.ā To which he adds: āAgain, this is also agreeable in a general sense. ⦠John Calvin held virtually the same position ā albeit in a more nuanced way.ā No, he didnāt! This is a complete fabrication and an utter misunderstanding of Calvinās thought, as I will show in due time.
Actually, Stupik himself does the very thing he accuses me of doing when heās sometimes mingling his quotes with mine, adding irrelevant citations, coupled with a few punctuation errors and typos where we donāt even know exactly which New Testament letter heās referring to. He mentions Cor 2:7, but is it 1 Corinthians or 2 Corinthians? Itās anyoneās guess. Just like his essay, his citations are sometimes vague and ambiguous, off-topic, and in short supply.
Then he says something that conveys his lack of theological understanding: āThe reason why God predestined some for salvation does not matter, and so Kittimās apparent reason (that God foreknew them) is not a sound refutation of Calvinism.ā Of course it matters! If God is held accountable for orchestrating everything according to his sovereign will, then neither the devil nor human beings can be held morally responsible for all their crimes against humanity. Besides, there can be no free will. How can he possibly say that the criteria upon which God predestined a limited few to salvationāāand a great deal more to damnationāāādoes not matterā?
He asks:
If God predestined his elect because He
foreknew them, why must he predestine
them to do anything at all? In other words, if
God foreknew that someone would āfreely
chooseā him, of what use is predestination?
This is mentioned in the Bible in order to reject the theological notion that God cannot possibly know the future in an exhaustive sense. It lets us know that God can indeed foresee the future as well as those who will accept or reject his invitation to salvation (cf. Isaiah 46.10). The ability to see events in the future not only certifies and authenticates the message and character of God, for the purpose of putting your trust in the Lord, but it also reveals his omniscience through the inscripturated words: āI am the LORD, and there is no other; apart from me there is no Godā (Isa. 45.5; 46.9 NIV; cf. Deut. 18.20-22). Thus, through the doctrine of foreknowledge or predestination, the Lord informs us that he is truly God and that heās able to foresee those who will inherit eternal life and be glorified! Itās Stupekās view that is actually incomprehensible. Why would scripture tell us that some have been predestined to hell and some to heaven before their birth? How does that justify a just and righteous God?
Then Stupik challenges my interpretation of the parable of the vineyard workers found in Matthew 20:1-16. I write:
The point of the parable is that God is fair.
No one gets cheated. However, in
Calvinism, God is not fair. He does as he
pleases. He creates evil and chooses who
will be saved and who will be lost. ⦠Thatās
why Calvinism speaks of limited atonement.
Christās atoning death is not for everyone,
but only for a select few.
To which Stupik responds:
As for Kittimās first point, that God is āunfairā
in Calvinism, no explanation is given as to
why this Calvinist God is āunfair.ā Is God
unfair because he does what he pleases?
No, because he cannot desire sin. Is God
unfair because he doesnāt save all? No,
because we are not deserving of Godās
mercy and grace, and so his necessary
judgement is merely a form of Godās perfect
righteousness.
Just as he rarely uses citations to support his views, he similarly offers no proof, here, not even a passing reference to show how Godās arbitrary judgments to save some, but not others, can be reconciled with āGodās perfect righteousness.ā He further compounds his mistakes by neither acknowledging nor addressing the well-known fact that Calvinist predestination is based on Godās will, not manās. He brushes that aside by trying to excuse the unjust decrees of the Calvinist godāāwhen he randomly predestines people to hellāāas something we actually deserve, even if those decrees were formulated before we were born. How ironic is that?
In fact, he goes so far as to say:
As John Calvin himself wrote, āThough their
perdition depends on the predestination of
God,Ā the cause and matter of it is in
themselves.ā Of course, God does not have
to create evil in order for the reprobate to
exist. In our fallen state, we are incapable of
salvation. Although He ordains all that
comes to pass, God has never been the
direct and efficient cause of evil; he is
inversely incapable of doing so.
This is actually a misleading description of Calvinist theology. It will become apparent shortly that it is completely bogus and misinformed! Initially, I wrote that āCalvinists often use Bible verses out-of-context to support the idea that God is partial: that he plays favorites with human beings. They often quote Exodus 33.19b.ā Yet, Stupik asked for proof whether this is, in fact, the case. This is a rather silly point which reveals a certain degree of incompetence and immaturity on his part, and itās also a dead giveaway that Stupik is not quite so literate as he would have us believe. To ask for proof that Calvinists use Exodus 33.19 to support that God is partial is like asking for proof that the pope is Catholic.
Then he tries to shift the focus and explain away Calvinās view of divine bias through a sort of glorification of favoritism. In other words, he suggests that godās discrimination isnāt so much about the inequality of injustice and partiality as it is about the glory of election. Yet, the idea that the Calvinist god predestinates the doom of the reprobate is conveniently neither discussed nor even acknowledged by Stupik.
Stupikās language is often vague, ambiguous, and difficult to understand, forcing us to guess what he means. He first defends godās bias and partiality, even though it is not a flattering attribute of the Calvinist god who randomly and arbitrarily chooses who will be saved and who will be lost, but later he will contradict himself by defending the Calvinist god as just, ethical, and righteous. In attempting to exegete Romans 8.28-29, he says:
the very semantics of the verse create a
much better case for partiality. If the verse
is a proof of impartiality, why is the verse
about āĪæĻι ĪæĻ Ļ (those whom) God foreknewā,
and not simply āallā? As it deals with a
specific group ā āĪæĻι ĪæĻ Ļ,ā there is inherent
partiality present in Rom 8:28-29.
Additionally, ⦠there are plenty of verses
which create a strong case for partiality ā
chiefly in the very existence of the
reprobate. Presented in short-form for
brevity, see Matt. 13:49-50, 1 Thess. 1:9,
Matt. 5:22, and 2 Thess. 1:7b-8 for
yourselves.Ā Clearly, if the Calvinist
soteriology is correct, the New Testament
more definitively describes a God of even
bare-minimum partiality ā insofar as not all
will be saved..
Incidentally, in Romans 8.29, the reason God speaks about those whom he foreknew (į½ Ļι Īæį½Ļ ĻĻĪæĪγνĻ) is because heās only speaking about the elect: those who will inherit eternal salvation. Heās obviously not talking about the unsaved: those who will NOT inherit eternal salvation. So why would we expect him to speak about āallā people in the context of salvation? Romans 8.29 is not talking about Godās partiality in choosing some over against others but rather about the salvation of the elect: āthose whom he foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son.ā It would be an eisegesis to interpret this verse as evidence of partiality. Thatās not what itās talking about. And thatās precisely why the context doesnāt warrant a reference to āallā people. Besides, to say that God foresaw the elect beforehand is not the same as saying that God caused some to be the elect and others to be reprobates. Here Stupik is positing his own private interpretation, which is based on poor research methods.
But notice the 180 degree turn in the opposite direction where Stupik now claims to agree with me and argues that āGod ādoes not cause everything to happen as it does,ā because ⦠he is never the efficient cause of evilā:
As clarified earlier, God is not the direct, or
in AristotelianĀ terms, the efficient cause of
evil. In other words, God is not creating evil.
Kittim asks āWhat ever happened to the
attribute of omnibenevolence, the doctrine
that God is all-good, sans evil (cf. Ps 106.1;
135.3; Nah. 1.7; Mk 10.18)? Isaiah 65.16 calls
him āthe God of truthā (cf. Jn 17.17), while
Titus 1.1-2 asserts that God ānever lies.ā ā
The answer is simple, Calvinism shares that
very doctrine (Institutes 3:23:2-5).
Stupik continues:
A most common misunderstanding of
Calvinism is that Calvin did not believe in
any form of free will. As stated earlier,
Calvin did in fact believe in a form of human
agency, as he details in Institutes Book 1
Chapter 15 Section 8.
I will prove that this is actually not true. In fact, you cannot look an atheist in the eye and tell them that Christ died for you. Youād be lying because, according to Calvinism, he may not have died for them. So the story goesā¦
So, there seems to be a theological confusion in Calvinism about what God does and doesnāt do. In my view, predestination is based on foreknowledge, not on the impulsive whims of a capricious deity. To ācauseā is one thing; to āforeknowā is quite another.
Predestination
Predestination is, by definition, the doctrine that all events in the universe have been willed by God (i.e. fatalism). It is a form of theological determinism, which presupposes that all history is pre-ordained or predestined to occur. It is based on the absolute sovereignty of God (aka omnipotence). However, there seems to be a paradox in which Godās will appears to be incompatible with human free-will.
The concept of predestination is found only several times in the Bible. It is, however, a very popular doctrine as it is commonly held by many different churches and denominations. But itās also the seven-headed dragon of soteriology because of its forbidding controversy, which arises when we ask the question, āon what basis does God make his choice?ā Not to mention, how do you tell people God loves them and that Jesus died for you?
But if we study both the Old and New Testaments, especially in the original Biblical languages, we will come to realize that predestination doesnāt seem to be based on Godās sovereignty but rather on his āforeknowledge.ā This is the *Prescience* view of Predestination, namely, that the decision of salvation and/or condemnation is ultimately based on an individualās free choice. For example, John MacArthur argues that āthe offer is always unlimited or man couldnāt be condemned for rejecting it.ā
Letās take a look at the Old Testament. Isaiah 65.12 (ESV) employs the Hebrew term ×Ö¼×Öø× Ö“ÖØ××ŖÖ“× (ū·mÄĀ·nî·ṯî) to mean āI will destine,ā which is derived from the word ×Öø× Öø× (manah) and means to āappointā or āreckon.ā But on what basis does God make his choice of predestination to damnation (aka the doctrine ofĀ reprobation)? God says:
I will destine [or predestine] you to the
sword, and all of you shall bow down to the
slaughter, because, when I called, you did
not answer; when I spoke, you did not listen,
but you did what was evil in my eyes and
chose what I did not delight in.
Itās important to note that those who are condemned to damnation are predestined to go there because when God called them, they didnāt respond to his call. When God tried to enlighten them, they ādid not listen,ā but instead ādid what was evilā in his sight. In fact, they did what God disapproved of! Thatās a far cry from claiming, as the Calvinists do, that God willed it all along. Notice that Godās predestination for the reprobates is not based on his will for them not to be saved, but rather because they themselves had sinned. This is an explicit textual reference which indicates that it was something God ādid not delight in.ā So, itās not as if God predestined reprobates to hell based on his sovereign will, as Calvinism would have us believe, but rather because they themselves chose to āforsake the LORDā (Isa. 65.11).
The New Testament offers a similar explanation of Godās official verdict pertaining to the doctrine of reprobation, namely, that condemnation depends on human will, not on Godās will. John 3.16 (NIV) reads:
For God so loved the world that he gave his
one and only Son, that whoever believes in
him shall not perish but have eternal life.
Notice, it doesnāt say that only a limited few can believe and be saved by Jesus. Rather, it says āwhoever believes in him [ἵνα Ļį¾¶Ļ į½ ĻιĻĻεĻĻν Īµį¼°Ļ Ī±į½Ļὸν] shall not perish but have eternal life.ā That is, anyone who believes in Jesus will not be condemned but will be saved, and will therefore be reckoned as one of the elect. Verse 17 says: āFor God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him.ā Once again, thereās a clear distinction between the individual and the world as a whole, as well as a contrast between condemning and saving the world, and we are told that the Son was sent to save the entire world. The next verse (v. 18) explains that condemnation itself ultimately lies not with God but with our own personal choices and decisions. āWhoever does not believe stands condemned alreadyā (i.e. is predestined to condemnation):
Whoever believes in him is not condemned,
but whoever does not believe stands
condemned already because they have not
believed in the name of Godās one and only
Son.
Verse 19 puts this dilemma in its proper perspective and gives us the judicial verdict, as it were, that we are ultimately responsible for our actions:
This is the verdict: Light has come into the
world, but people loved darkness instead of
light because their deeds were evil.
Similarly, Mt. 22.14 clearly shows that those that are not chosen are nevertheless called: āFor many are called, but few are chosen.ā
Why would God call them if he already knew that they wouldnāt be chosen? Would he be calling them out of spite? What is more, according to the Biblical text, anyone can become a member of Godās family. Just because God already āforeknowsā who will accept and who will reject his soteriological invitation doesnāt mean that people are held unaccountable. For Christ doesnāt only take away the sin of the elect, but of the entire world (Jn 1.29 NKJV): āBehold! The Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world!ā First John 2.2 reads:
And He Himself is the propitiation for our
sins, and not for ours only but also for the
whole world.
In a similar fashion, Rev 22.17 (KJ) says: āCome. And let him that is athirst come. And whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely [Ī“ĻĻεάν].ā That doesnāt sound to me like a predestined election in which only a select few will receive the water of life, but rather a proclamation that salvation is āfreelyā (Ī“ĻĻεάν) offered to anyone who desires it. Moreover, in 2 Pet. 3.9 (ESV), we are told that āThe Lordā doesnāt want to condemn anyone at all: ā[heās] not wishing that any should perish, but that all should reach repentance.ā Is this biblical reference compatible with Calvinās views? Definitely not! Calvin suggests that god is the author of sin and the only one who ultimately decides on who will repent and who will perish.
If, in fact, God predestined some to salvation and some to perdition, so that Jesus didnāt die for all people but only for a limited few, then it wouldnāt make any sense for the New Testament to say that Christ āgave himself a ransom for all.ā Nor would God contradict himself by saying that āhe desires everyone to be saved.ā First Timothy 2.3-6 (NRSV) reads:
This is right and is acceptable in the sight of
God our Savior, who desires everyone to be
saved and to come to the knowledge of the
truth. For there is one God; there is also one
mediator between God and humankind,
Christ Jesus, himself human, who gave
himself a ransom for all [į½Ļį½²Ļ ĻάνĻĻν].
So Christ āgave himself a ransom for all [not for some].ā Notice that Christās atonement potentially covers even sinners who are not yet part of the āelect.ā In the following verse, observe what the text says. There were apostates who denied āthe Lord who bought them.ā This means that Christās atonement is not ālimitedā; it covers them, as well. Second Peter 2.1 (NKJV) reads:
But there were also false prophets among
the people, even as there will be false
teachers among you, who will secretly bring
in destructive heresies, even denying the
Lord who bought them, and bring on
themselves swift destruction.
Prescience (Foreknowledge)
The Greek term that is typically used for predestination is also used in Rom. 1.4 (ESV), namely, the term į½ĻιĻĪøĪνĻĪæĻ (from į½ĻίζĻ), which carries the meaning of ādetermining beforehand,ā āappointing,ā or ādesignating.ā However, notice that, here, this term is translated as ādeclaredā:
and was declared to be the Son of God in
power according to the Spirit of holiness by
his resurrection from the dead, Jesus Christ
our Lord.
But was Jesus Christ predestined to be the Son of God? No. He already was the Son of God. Nevertheless, what he would perform in the future was ādeclaredā beforehand, or announced in advance. This verse, then, demonstrates that the word āforeknownā would be a more accurate translation than āpredestinedā!
Similarly, Rom. 8.29 (ESV) tells us that those he āforeknewā (ĻĻĪæĪγνĻ), the same God ĻĻĪæĻĻιĻεν (from ĻĻοοĻίζĻ), that is, foreordained, predetermined, or pre-appointed beforehand. And Rom. 8.30 goes on to say that those he ĻĻĪæĻĻιĻεν (predetermined) were the same that God also called, justified, and glorified. Verse 29 says: āFor those whom he foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son.ā Notice that Godās *foreknowledge* temporally precedes predestination. If God already predestined some, but not others, before the foundation of the world, then his foreknowledge would be irrelevant. But since it is on this basis that God predestines, it doesnāt sound as if predestination is chosen on the basis of Godās sovereign will.
Acts 4.28 does say that Godās will ĻĻĪæĻĻιĻεν (predetermined beforehand) what will happen. But it doesnāt necessarily follow that everything that has occurred in human history is based on the will of God (i.e. fatalism). And we donāt know to what extent God influences reality. So, we cannot jump to any conclusions that God is behind everything that happens. Why? Because with absolute responsibility comes absolute blame. Is God responsible for murder, or rape, or genocide? I think not! So, we are on safer ground if we acknowledge that God āforeknewā what would happen and declared it beforehand (cf. Isa. 46.10). This Arminian notion would be far more consistent with the Bible than placing the full blame for everything that has ever occurred in the world on God. This seems to be the Achillesā heel of Calvinism!
The fact that God created the universe obviously implies that he had a purpose for it. So, Iām not discounting the notion that all things are, in a certain sense, guided by his ultimate purpose. However, I take issue with those thinkers who take it to the extreme and portray the deity as an authoritarian and capricious God who bypasses the principles of truth, justice, and wisdom and intervenes by forcibly coercing manās free will. That type of God is inconsistent with the infinitely wise, holy, true, and good God of the Bible. That is precisely why āArminius taught that Calvinist predestination and unconditional election made God the author of evilā (Wiki)!
Quotations From Calvinās Works
Excerpted from John Calvinās āInstitutes of the Christian religion,ā Book 3, ch 23.
Calvinās chief argument can be summarized as follows: men are, by nature, wicked, so if god has predestined some to eternal hellfire, why do they complain? They deserve it. He exclaims:
Accordingly, when we are accosted in such
terms as these, Why did God from the first
predestine some to death, when, as they
were not yet in existence, they could not
have merited sentence of death? let us by
way of reply ask in our turn, What do you
imagine that God owes to man, if he is
pleased to estimate him by his own nature?
As we are all vitiated by sin, we cannot but
be hateful to God, and that not from
tyrannical cruelty, but the strictest justice.
But if all whom the Lord predestines to
death are naturally liable to sentence of
death, of what injustice, pray, do they
complain?
He continues his accusatory thought that even though god condemned people to hellfire long before they were born or had done anything to warrant such an outcome, they nevertheless deserve it and should not complain. Calvin callously says:
Should all the sons of Adam come to
dispute and contend with their Creator,
because by his eternal providence they
were before their birth doomed to perpetual
destruction, when God comes to reckon
with them, what will they be able to mutter
against this defense? If all are taken from a
corrupt mass, it is not strange that all are
subject to condemnation. Let them not,
therefore, charge God with injustice, if by
his eternal judgment they are doomed to a
death to which they themselves feel that
whether they will or not they are drawn
spontaneously by their own nature.
But if this decree was foreordained by an absolutely sovereign god even before people were born and prior to having committed any transgressions, why are they held accountable for their sins? It appears to be a contradiction. Curiously enough, John Calvin,
admit[s] that by the will of God all the sons
of Adam fell into that state of wretchedness
in which they are now involved; and this is
just what I said at the first, that we must
always return to the mere pleasure of the
divine will, the cause of which is hidden in
himself.
So he admits that we all sinned āby the will of Godā and that god does as he pleases, yet he concludes: who are we to question godās decisions? But is this a proper explanation of predestination that fully justifies godās justice, or is it rather an incoherent and unsatisfactory answer? Calvin insensitively asserts:
They again object, Were not men
predestinated by the ordination of God to
that corruption which is now held forth as
the cause of condemnation? If so, when
they perish in their corruptions they do
nothing else than suffer punishment for that
calamity, into which, by the predestination
of God, Adam fell, and dragged all his
posterity headlong with him. Is not he,
therefore, unjust in thus cruelly mocking his
creatures? ⦠For what more seems to be
said here than just that the power of God is
such as cannot be hindered, so that he can
do whatsoever he pleases?
Reprobation, according to Calvin, is based on the notion āthat not all people have been chosen but that some have not been chosen or have been passed by in Godās eternal election.ā But if no one deserves the merits of salvation, and if no one obeys the will of god except by godās grace, then how is godās election justified? Calvinās response that itās justified because god is just is not an explanation: it is a tautological redundancy. Calvinās reply would be: god decided not to save everybody, and who are we to criticize him? Unfortunately, thatās not an adequate or satisfactory answer.
Godās decision to save some people is called election, and his decision not to save other people is called preterition. According to Calvinism, god chooses to bypass sinners by not granting them belief, which is equivalent, in a certain sense, to creating unbelief (by omission) in them. In other words, god chooses to save some, but not others. And it pleases him to do so. So, is the god of Calvinism just?
Is this truly the love of Christ that is freely offered to all? By contrast, according to Scripture, God wishes to save everyone without exception (1 Tim. 2.4; 2 Pet. 3.9; Ezek. 18.23; Mt. 23.37). When Matthew 22.14 says, āFor many are called, but few are chosen,ā it clearly shows that those that are not chosen are still ācalled.ā It doesnāt mean that god did not choose them for salvation. It means they themselves chose to decline the offer of their own accord. How can one logically argue that god wants all people to be saved but only chooses to save some of them? It is a contradiction in terms. And then to attribute this injustice and inequality to what appears to be an āarrogantā god who does as he pleases is dodging the issue.
However, Calvin rejects prescience on account āthat all events take place by his [godās] sovereign appointmentā:
If God merely foresaw human events, and
did not also arrange and dispose of them at
his pleasure, there might be room for
agitating the question, how far his
foreknowledge amounts to necessity; but
since he foresees the things which are to
happen, simply because he has decreed
that they are so to happen, it is vain to
debate about prescience, while it is clear
that all events take place by his sovereign
appointment.
So, Calvin ultimately places all responsibility and accountability on god, who has foreordained all events āby his sovereign appointment.ā But if hell was prepared for the devil and his angels (Mt 25.41), and if god is held accountable for orchestrating everything, then the devil cannot be held morally responsible for all his crimes against humanity. Therefore, according to Calvinism, it would logically follow that god is ultimately responsible for evil, which would implicate himself to be ipso facto evil! Thereās no way to extricate god from that logical conclusion. And many Calvinists admit that God creates evil. Jim Brown of Truth & Grace Ministries is one of them.
Calvin Says that god Created Evil at his Own Pleasure
In Calvinās view, god decreed that Adam should sin. In other words, god decrees all sin, which is a sign of his omnipotence and will. How revolting? Calvin writes:
They deny that it is ever said in distinct
terms, God decreed that Adam should
perish by his revolt. As if the same God, who
is declared in Scripture to do whatsoever he
pleases, could have made the noblest of his
creatures without any special purpose.
They say that, in accordance with free-will,
he was to be the architect of his own
fortune, that God had decreed nothing but
to treat him according to his desert. If this
frigid fiction is received, where will be the
omnipotence of God, by which, according to
his secret counsel on which every thing
depends, he rules over all?
Invariably, Calvin places the blame indirectly on god. Calvin holds to an uncompromising hard-determinism position, without the slightest possibility of free will, by claiming that even godās foreknowledge is āordained by his decreeā:
it is impossible to deny that God foreknew
what the end of man was to be before he
made him, and foreknew, because he had
so ordained by his decree.
If this isnāt an evil doctrine, I donāt know what is. Iām not sure how much more blasphemous or heretical it can get. This is a far more dangerous doctrine than, say, that of the Snake handling Christian cults. Calvin unabashedly declares that god created evil in the world āat his own pleasure.ā He further expounds his abominable view by writing:
God not only foresaw the fall of the
first man, and in him the ruin of his
posterity; but also at his own
pleasure arranged it.
Wasnāt Satan the one who supposedly arranged it? Hmm, now Iām not so sure ⦠If god is the author of evil and the author of sin, why would he involve Satan in this script? In fact, Calvin insists that the wicked perish not because of godās permission but because of his will. He says that ātheir perdition depends on the predestination of God ⦠The first man fell because the Lord deemed it meet that he should: why he deemed it meet, we know not.ā What a dreadful thing to say. Itās as if Calvin was under the inspiration of Satan, teaching ādoctrines of demonsā (1 Tim. 4.1 NKJV). Calvin continues:
Here they recur to the distinction between
will and permission, the object being to
prove that the wicked perish only by the
permission, but not by the will of God. But
why do we say that he permits, but just
because he wills? Nor, indeed, is there any
probability in the thing itselfāviz. that man
brought death upon himself merely by the
permission, and not by the ordination of
God; as if God had not determined what he
wished the condition of the chief of his
creatures to be. I will not hesitate, therefore,
simply to confess with Augustine that the
will of God is necessity, and that every thing
is necessary which he has willed.
Calvin attempts to show that thereās no contradiction in his statement but, instead of providing logical proof, he once again resorts to circular reasoning, namely, that the accountability rests with an authoritarian god who does as he pleases. He goes on to say:
There is nothing inconsistent with this when
we say, that God, according to the good
pleasure of his will, without any regard to
merit, elects those whom he chooses for
sons, while he rejects and reprobates
others.
Instead of admitting that this is his own wicked view of god, which certainly deserves rebuke and severe criticism, he suggests that this is the way god really is. In other words, he indirectly blames god by way of compliments. By insisting on godās Sovereignty and omnipotence, he sets god up to take the blame for everything. Yet in his evasive and largely indefensible argument, he ends up justifying the seemingly ācapriciousā acts of god by saying that god is still just:
Wherefore, it is false and most wicked to
charge God with dispensing justice
unequally, because in this predestination he
does not observe the same course towards
all. ⦠he is free from every accusation; just
as it belongs to the creditor to forgive the
debt to one, and exact it of another.
Conclusion
Just because God set the universe in motion doesnāt mean that every detail therein is held ipso facto to be caused by him. God could still be sovereign and yet simultaneously permit the existence of evil and free will. This is not a philosophical contradiction (see Compatibilism aka Soft determinism).
The Calvinist god is not fair. He does as he pleases. He creates evil and chooses who will be saved and who will be lost. He is neither trustworthy nor does he equally offer unconditional love to all! In fact, this view is more in line with the capricious gods of Greek mythology than with the immutable God of the Bible.
Calvinās deity is surprisingly similar to the god of the Gnostics, who was responsible for all instances of falsehood and evil in the world! This is the dark side of a pagan god who doesnāt seem to act according to the principles of truth and wisdom but according to personal whims. With this god, you could end up in hell in a heartbeat, through no fault of your own. Therefore, Calvinās god is more like Satan!
This is certainly NOT the loving, trustworthy, and righteous God of the Bible in whom āThere is no evilā whatsoever (Ps 92.15 NLT; Jas. 1.13). Calvinās god is not āthe God of truthā (Isa. 65.16; cf. Jn 17.17), who ānever liesā (Tit. 1.1-2), and who is all-good, sans evil (cf. Ps 106.1; 135.3; Nah. 1.7; Mk 10.18). Calvinās theology does not square well with the NT notion āthat God is light and in him there is no darkness at allā (1 Jn 1.5 NRSV)!
Thus, Calvinās argument is not only fallacious, unsound, and unbiblical, but also completely disingenuous. For if ālife and death are fixed by an eternal and immutable decree of God,ā including the prearrangement of sin āat his own pleasure,ā as Calvin asserts, then āto charge God with dispensing justice unequallyā is certainly a valid and robust criticism! Calvin harshly accused his critics of promulgating blasphemies, but little did he realize the greater blasphemies and abominations that he himself was uttering! A case in point is that he makes God the author of sin!
Jonathan Edwards (who was of the Reformed tradition), in his treatise onĀ The Freedom of the Will, wrote:
I do not deny that God is the Author
of Sin.
Therefore, in Calvinism, God has become Satan!
āā-














