Think it through.
In answer to the question, "
What repentance do the elect need?" the answer is the elect who are not yet saved need to repent as a part of the salvation experience. I agree.
That is not the problem. The problem occurs when we discuss the matter of
perishing. The elect CANNOT perish soteriologically. This is axiomatic to Calvinist soteriology. It does not matter whether they are the already-saved elect, or the not-yet-saved elect. THEY CANNOT PERISH SOTERIOLOGICALLY!!! So, either the clause about God not wanting them to perish is oxymoronic (the potentially perishing imperishables?
) or the perishing is not soteriological.
No one here is even remotely addressing that problem.
THE ELECT CANNOT PERISH!
So how can God desire something not happen He knows cannot ontologically happen? If the verse is made out to pertain only to the elect, then the perishing God does not desire is not a soteriological perishing. Conversely, if the perishing is soteriological, then the verse is not limited to the elect
because the elect cannot perish.
And I have started to repeat myself so unless and until I read something new, I will be taking my leave of the thread. I stand by what I said at the beginning of my participation in this thread (see
Post #84).