It is not blasphemous at all.
Blasphemy is blasphemy. To ascribe the Lord of the Bible with a willy-nilly approach to His election is blasphemy.
Saying God's ways are mysterious and beyond our understanding, true; however that is not a reason to help yourself to a license of interpretation saying all whom disagree don't understand God's ways are unsearchable - and same applies for you too.
I'm telling you it is blasphemous to say that Calvinists think that God is capricious in His election of those He desires. Since Calvinists have never ever said or implied such wickedness -- non-Cals should cease and desist from that line of attack.
Therefore why did God choose one over the other?
It is due to His good pleasure. God has the right to do whatever He wants with people. He doesn't need your permission to do things that you think are unfair.You sound like the objector in Ro. 9:14 (among other places) who charges God with being unjust. Paul had previously said that Jacob was chosen instead of Esau. The objector didn't like that. Paul responded with 'I will have mercy on whom I have mercy, and I will have compassion on whom I have compassion."
Yet the question how does God choose remains unanswered.
It's due to His good pleasure as I've said before. But I know that will not satisfy you. Therefore, I will give Paul's answer to the objector in 9:20a :"But who are you, a mere human being, to talk back to God?"
Does a non elect non believer have an eternal destiny other than the lake of fire?
Of course not.
While its ok to take eternal life election from Roms 9, ...
I'm glad you agree with the Bible on this point.
Calvinist ought to see that these objections are very valid, disgarding them and calling it blaphemy[sic] is simply unreasonable.
No, quite reasonable. The objections that Paul deals with in Romans 9 demonstrate that anyone who feels sympathetic towards such an individual is arguing against God. That's not a good place for you to be in.
Last edited by a moderator: