they dont. They say exactly that. Jesus Himself said that many will try to get to Heaven, but few will.
Matthew 7:13
Luke 13:23
Here, let me help you...
Calvin never renounced baptismal regeneration and infant
baptism. He taught that salvation is a process, which is not
the gospel of Jesus Christ. Tough a process of hearing the
gospel, conviction, and spiritual enlightenment precedes it,
salvation itself is a birth (Joh. 3:3). It is to be made alive from
spiritual death (Eph. 2:1). It is to be delivered from the power
of darkness and translated into the kingdom of Christ (Col.
1:13). No other type of salvation is described in the book of
Acts. We think of the 3,000 on the day of Pentecost, the
Ethiopian eunuch, Saul, Cornelius, Lydia, and the Philippian
jailer.
John Calvin had no such conversion experience. He taught
that “as the efficacy of baptism does not depend upon the
person who administers it, we confess that those baptized in
it [the Roman Catholic Church] do not need a second
baptism” (Gallican Confession, 1559, Art. 28). Thus he
continued to trust in baptismal regeneration as taught by
Rome, which is a false gospel.
Calvin taught that salvation is progressive, being strongly
infuenced by Augustine’s life and works. “Augustine
describes his so-called ‘garden experience’ and water baptism
as initial stages of a
lifelong, progressive conversion” ??(See
David Beale, “Augustine: His Life and Infuence,” in Historical
Teology In-Depth, 2013, 1:334-50).
Would you agree?