John....it's the ONLY thing they get correct
AND
They don't have a correct understanding of it as all other Christians do.
EVERY Christian and Christian denomination believes in the sovereignty of God.
What Calvinists convert that to mean is that NOT ONLY is God in control of everything...
but that He predestinates everything.
Now,,,if you're going to speak to a Calvinist, this distinction MUST be made or it's going to sound like, yes, God IS IN CONTROL of everything.
Nothing happens that God does not PERMIT to happen.
Here's the problem:
Calvinist's don't believe that God PERMITS what happens here on our side,,,,
but that He MAKES it happen...
He predestinated everything that happens.
Now, I've known you long enough to believe that you are NOT a reformed believer...
so what give Calvinism fuel when it's the FARTHEST theology from the love, mercy and justice of the God all Christians know and love?
If we're going to speak of God's glory or His sovereignty....there is NO Christian that is going to disagree with you.
But...yeah,,,let's get our definitions correct.
The Calvinists on this thread do not understand SOVEREIGNTY the same way you or I do.
Or,,,have you become reformed???
Why discuss something that is obvious?
Of course God IS glory...
God does not HAVE something...
He IS something....
DIVINE SIMPLICTY.
God does not HAVE love.
He IS love.
Now...because God has control over everything....
does this mean man has no free will?
Does this mean I cannot deny God?
If I deny Him, will He deny me?
What DID Jesus mean when He said that?
This is very interesting.
You wouldn't want to start a thread on this??
You can say for sure that God is glorious – your Bible declares that he is – but you cannot accurately and fully describe in words the glory that Scripture declares. Perhaps the only workable path into some understanding of the grandeur of the glory of God is to read the entire Bible from cover to cover over and over again, looking for divine glory. Why? Because the glory of God isn't defined in his Word; no, his glory is so grand that it splashes across every page of his book.
That being said, there are places where Scripture attempts to define the hugeness of the glory of God with the smallness of human language so we can get a glimpse of what it's like. For example: the prophet Isaiah, under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, stretches human language to its furthest point of elasticity in order to give us a little glimpse of God's glory. He writes, "Who has measured the waters in the hollow of his hand?" (Isaiah 40:12).
I've actually done this, and it would be a good word picture for you to attempt. Go to your sink, turn it on, and see how much water you can cup in the palm of your hand before it starts spilling out. Then, consider that your God can hold all of the liquid in the universe and not spill a single drop!
Isaiah continues: "[He] has weighed the mountains in a scale … Behold, the nations are like a drop from a bucket [to him] … [He] stretches out the heavens like a curtain, and spreads them like a tent to dwell in" (Isaiah 40: 12, 15, 22).
The prophet is employing incalculably huge word pictures to help us have a miniscule glimpse of understanding into how glorious God is. Yet even these very picturesque and helpful descriptions fall miserably short of capturing the awesome glory of God.
So, when the Bible speaks of God's glory, what is it talking about? The doctrine of God's glory encompasses the greatness, beauty, and perfection of all that he is.
source: The Doctrine of Glory