You don't agree with me because..of what you believe and I don't? Isn't that obvious - why assert the same premise that we're essentially debating over? I don't believe in double predestination for the reasons I've stated above - how do you reconcile them? You don't believe in single predestination for the reasons you've mentioned and I'm sharing how I reconcile them - how do you consider these? We'll have to engage with specific arguments to proceed towards conclusions.
If Scripture is clear - then how are there inconsistencies raised as per your interpretation? Which part of Scripture are you referring to? Romans 9 has been interpreted as per
Single Predestination which makes for consistent reading - what do you find inconsistent there? What of the Scriptural references I've raised - how do you interpret those as per your belief system?
Secondly, how is it diminishing God's sovereign control when it is God who sovereignly decrees to allow man's self-determinism? Was God's sovereign control diminished when He allowed for the old covenant to fail?
It makes sense to a whole lot of other people - anyway, the onus is not on Scriptures to explain its purposes in order for us to accept them. Scriptures cannot be broken and whatever it states we must accept whether or not we fully comprehend how it exactly works out. Double predestination makes some claims that are directly refuted by Scriptures - rather than hold on to it just because it 'makes sense', shouldn't we be studying scriptures anew to see where it leads us?
Just to get you started, double predestination claims God does no supernatural work in the non-elect towards salvation - Scriptures records God granting the non-elect a new heart at least in the case of king Saul and Heb 10 mentions those who fall away were sanctified initially by Christ's blood. This is what I see as a direct contradiction with Scriptures - how do you see it?