@DaveXR650
Here are just a few problems with your theology.
The Law
Calvinism mistakes the law as justice, as the very righteousness of God. Scripture tells us that the law is not God’s righteousness itself but one manifestation of God’s righteousness (Romans 3:21).
The law is just. But the law itself is not justice. The law shows us what we are, like a school master or a teacher (Galatians 3:24). It shows us our sin (Romans 7:7). In other words, through the law comes the knowledge of sin (Romans 3:30).
The law shows us our sin.
But our sins are not the core problem. Sins are fruit that result from the flesh as we give in to sinful passions (Romans 7:5). It is from within the heart of man that these evil thoughts arise (Mark 7:21-23). Sins are fruits of the flesh, things that are produced by the flesh (Galatians 5:19-21).
The law shows us our sins, the fruits that men who live “in the realm of the flesh” produce. A mind set on the flesh is death.
But Calvinism has adopted a philosophy of justice that can only deal with righteousness and justice through the law, and this is why a Calvinist can never understand the Atonement. They hold the philosophy of John Calvin which reduced justice to an accounting ledger and demanded that the judge balance the deficits by collecting a debt (as Calvin put it, the role of justice is to avenge the law).
The Righteousness of Christ
Calvinism mistakes righteousness as being accomplished through the law rather than the law showing one’s righteous or unrighteous state. Often Calvinists state the heresy that Christ is righteous for His perfect obedience to the law and God imputes to us that perfect obedience to the law.
Christ is eternally righteous. He fulfilled the law because He is righteous. The law testifies to the righteousness of Christ (Romans 3:21). The law shows us that Jesus is righteous and the law shows us our sins.
We are declared righteous in the present because Christ is the guarantee that we will be righteousness as we are predestined to be conformed to His image, justified and glorified.
Calvinism twists and redefines terms and words
Forgiveness is the act of foregoing vengeance, punishment or anger. Calvinists redefines the word to suit their philosophy. God, under their philosophy, cannot be just if He forgives sins. So God punishes our sins on Jesus and considers this to be “forgiving” sins. The problem, obviously, is this is not the definition of forgiveness. Forgiveness is something that one does in order to forgive.
Surety is another word Calvinists like to twist. It is used in accounting, so it naturally fits into their philosophy. The problem is that the main use of the word is not in accounting at all. The main use of the word is in a type of bond, an arrangement between three parties. One is given something in advance. The Giver accepts a guarantee that conditions of the thing advanced will be met. The Surety is the guarantee (in secular terms, this is a surety bond).
God declares us righteous. He does this because Jesus is the surety of a better covenant. We are predestined to be conformed into the image of Christ. He is Himself the guarantee that we will be righteous.
Propitiation is another fun word that Calvinists redefine. The word itself means “to gain favor” (the word comes from propitious which means “favorable, gracious”). Calvinists view Christ as the Propitiation, but in reality they mean “substitution”. If God’s wrath is propitiated then that wrath ceases to exist as it is turned to favor. The propitiation is NEVER the object of wrath or displeasure. It is the opposite. The propitiation merits a change towards the one for whom the propitiation is made.
Superficial Atonement
Calvinistic Atonement treats the cross and the blood of Christ as accomplishing something superficial. It views the Atonement as God punishing Jesus for our sins. But our sins are merely manifestations of the problem of man. Punishing the sins of man does not bring man back into a good standing with God, it merely satisfies the demands Calvin’s philosophy places on God.
The problem is not sins but that we fall short of the glory of God. Our sins point to our condition.
Calvinism denies Scripture in explaining it away
I talked about Calvinism redefining terms. But in so doing Calvinism denies Scripture.
Scripture presents the basis of God forgiving sins as being repentance, and defines this repentance as ultimately becoming a man that does not fall short of God’s glory. Man must repent, turn to God, turn from evil, God gives man a new heart and spirit, the man dies to sin, dies to the flesh, dies to their former lusts, dies to their old self, and is made alive in Christ.
But Calvinists have determined that God cannot actually forgive sins. Although nowhere in God’s words, Calvinists have decided that, per Calvin’s philosophy of justice, God has to punish sins so He treats sins as if they are material things and takes them from us to put on Jesus, Jesus suffers this punishment and we are “forgiven”.
Just and the Justifier of Sinners
God tells us that He overlooked the sins prior to the New Covenant so that He would be just and the justifier of sinners. Calvinists assume that this means God had to punish those sins on Jesus in order to clear the books. But the verse specifically speaks of those sins committed prior to the New Covenant.
God is just. But rather than working a way through the law to justify sinners God chose another path – that is, a manifestation of His righteousness apart from the law.
God justifies sinners without being unjust because of the Cross. We are justified based on the righteousness of Christ. The law holds no condemnation for the just, and we will be justified. We will be glorified.