Philthy:
We know from Scripture that God “wishes all men to come to repentance”. That it is God’s will that all come to repentance. (If you don’t accept that last statement, then please explain how an omniscient God would wish something but refrain from willing it - good luck.)
Indeed, how do the “Reformers” grapple with the question that an omniscient God could reveal something publicly as his will, but then not have what he has publicly revealed manifest itself in creation? This question goes to the core of what is defective within the thinking of the Reformers. In the end, the Calvinists are forced to believe in a deceitful God that publicly reveals his will as one thing, but at the same time maintains a
secret will that contradicts his public will.
Right from the first book in the Bible, the Calvinist gets tangled into a knot of contradiction over the question of God’s will and original sin. In the Book of Genesis, God publicly revealed his will to Adam and Eve that they were not to eat of the tree of knowledge of good and evil. For Calvinists, this is a huge problem because they believe that neither angels or men have free will, and that that angels and men cannot do
anything that is against the will of God. But we know that Adam and Eve were created in a state of sanctifying grace, that they were not created in state of “total” depravity. And we also know that even though Adam and Eve were living in a state of grace without sin, they did, in fact, choose to be disobedient to God’s publicly revealed will. Adam and Eve were disobedient to God’s publicly revealed will and fell from grace. How does the Calvinist resolve this problem?
Instead of abandoning the absurdity that men have no free will, Calvin developed the even more absurd (and blasphemous) doctrine that God is a liar that publicly reveals his will as one thing, but secretly wills the opposite. God
publicly revealed to Adam and Eve that they were not to eat of the tree of knowledge of good and evil, but he
secretly willed that they would be disobedient to the public revelation of God’s will. This then is the absurdity that is Calvinism - that Adam and Eve really were
not disobedient to God’s real will, because God secretly willed Adam and Eve to commit sin!
The denial that men and angels have free will is heresy, and this ridiculous idea leads to one heresy after another within Calvinism, leading ultimately to blasphemy that God is the author of all evil. … here we come upon the primal mystery to which in his argument Calvin recurs again and again. This Supreme Will fixes an absolute order, physical, ethical, religious, never to be modified by anything we can attempt. For we cannot act upon God, else He would cease to be the First Cause. Holding this clue, it is comparatively simple to trace Calvin’s footsteps along the paths of history and revelation.
Luther had written that man’s will is enslaved either to God or to Satan, but it is never free. Melanchthon declaimed against the “impious dogma of Free Will,” adding that since all things happen by necessity according to Divine predestination, no room was left for it.
This was truly the article by which the Reformation should stand or fall. God is sole agent. Therefore creation, redemption, election, reprobation are in such sense His acts that man becomes merely their vehicle and himself does nothing.
…Both [Calvin] and Luther found a way of escape from the moral dilemma inflicted on them by distinguishing
two wills in the Divine Nature, one
public or apparent, which commanded good and forbade evil as the Scripture teaches, the other just, but
secret and unsearchable, predetermining that Adam and all the reprobate should fall into sin and perish. At no time did Calvin grant that Adam’s transgression was due to his own free will.
Calvinism, The Catholic Encyclopedia