@beloved57,
If the doctrines of Total Depravity and Irresistible Grace are both true then what does Luke 7:30 mean?
Luke 7:30 But the Pharisees and lawyers rejected the will of God for themselves, not having been baptized by him.
The word "will" in that sentence is "
boulē". It's the same word that Luke used in Acts 2:23, 4:28 & 13:36 and that the author of Hebrews used in Hebrews 6:17....
Acts 2:23 Him, being delivered by the determined
purpose and foreknowledge of God, you have taken by lawless hands, have crucified, and put to death;
Acts 4:28 to do whatever Your hand and Your
purpose determined before to be done.
Acts 13:36 “For David, after he had served his own generation by the
will of God, fell asleep, was buried with his fathers, and saw corruption;
Hebrews 6:17 Thus God, determining to show more abundantly to the heirs of promise the immutability of His
counsel, confirmed
it by an oath,
"Boule" is the strongest word available to discuss the will of God. Not that it would matter because there is not the slightest whim of God's that does not go unfulfilled, according to Calvinist doctrine. Even the very wills of men are precisely as God determined that they would be an eternity before the first particle of matter was created.
Luke 7:30 explicitly tells us that God wanted for the Pharisees and lawyers to get baptized (i.e. have faith in God and obey His commands) and that they did not do it. Yet you say that the will of God cannot be resisted; that the natural man cannot seek God and that those He calls cannot refuse Him. You say that that those who refuse to repent do so because God chose not to show them mercy.
What then could Luke 7:30 possibly mean?
Clete
P.S. Since B57 will not answer the question or even engage the subject, the answer is that Luke 7:30 means that Calvinism is false. That's what it means.