Well, the Molinism espoused by Protestants goes something like this:
God chose to actualize this world for whatever reasons (some Protestant Molinists would say this world is the one in which the most people would be saved), and He could have created any number of worlds, but He sovereignly chose this one.
So the thinking is that He chose the world in which the elect would be saved (therefore making election a work of God), but the reprobate would have chosen hell on their own (therefore making damnation a work of man).
This really does make sense. However, after reading various articles about Catholic Molinism, I am lost. The articles from
www.newadvent.org are exactly what I mean by being too intricate for a layperson to understand. William Lane Craig explains his views easily, consistently and clearly.
JerryZ wrote, “In the Protestant side you cannot have Molinsm as such, they would balk at using a system developed by a jesuit priest, instead the have mainly Calvinism from Calvin with his thesis on total depravity and double predestination.” Nope. Look up William Lane Craig and Molinism. Furthermore, there are Arminians and Single Predestinarians (ie, Lutherans) in the Protestant world.