You have Calvin and Augustine viewed throught the eyes of Calvin and scripture interpreted through the eyes of Calvin. Where is +Theophilus (god lover) of Antioch, +Irenaeus, +Athanasius of Alexandria, +Basil, +Gregory of Nazianzus, +Gregory of Nyssa, +John Chrysostom, +Cyril of Alexandria, +Macarius, +Maximus the Confessor, +John Damascene, +Simeon the New Theologian, +Greogory Palamas?
Man corrupts himself but this is all part of God's plan. The problem I find with a lot of non-Calvinist folks is they don't understand that Calvinism does not make God the "author of evil". It simply states that God ordained Adam step, Adam fell and the rest is history.
Well, what Calvinists don't understand is that most Christians don't view God as a master computer programmer.
I gave you about five verses that states otherwise.
I don't filter scripture under the lens of Calvin. I study how the Fathers, saints, and theologians of the church understood scripture and the experience of their participation in the life of the Holy Trinity throughout the 2000 year history of Christianity. In my opinion, this is the only thing that can prepare the ground for reading scripture.
Incredibly you ignore all these verses and make the statement that God doesn't consider man to be evil
I don't play Jeopardy: "Alex, can I have 'One verse quotes from the Bible' for 200?" You can twist it and turn it any way you want. How did the Fathers, saints, and theologians understand their experience of the Holy Trinity over the past 2000 years? Now that is a category that can help to understand scripture.
People run around here screaming, "free will, free will" like it something to be defended. They ignore the balance and tension of God's sovereign rule over their lives. The Bible clearly states that we are either "slaves to sin" or "slaves to righteousness" (Rom 6) and we need to wake up to that fact.
I would submit the answer to man's will and God's sovereignty lies in this proverb: