Wrangler
Well-Known Member
No, Jesus died for all; but not all avail themselves of what He did for them, appropriating it by faith.
This is the kind of double speak people hate.
Compare normal language usage using the Titanic as an example. 'Charlie died to save everyone on the Titanic' is taken to mean no one died because of his heroics. To add the qualifier is to destroy the purpose for which he died. Effective use of language would simply be to say something like 'Charlie offered to save everyone but not everyone took his offer.' Then subsequent would be the qualifier, 'Charlie died attempting to save everyone,' which implies the truth that not everyone was saved by Charlie's actions. Thus, Charlie offered to save everyone but not everyone took his offer. He died in the attempt.
Obviously, this casts a shadow that Charlie was not entirely successful and that his efforts (or sacrifice) reduce to a mere offer. Because this shadow of failure is unacceptable to those who hold the man-is-God thesis, doublespeak is invoked. It's not Charlie's fault; it's the fault of those who did not avail themselves to his efforts.
Alternatively, one could start with the basic fact not everyone is saved. Not everyone was saved despite Charlie's sacrifice, which only applied - in practice - to those who availed themselves of his offer. The figurative 'save the whole world' (in theory) is too attractive to let go. So, doublespeak. Charlies saved everyone on the Titanic (except those who he didn't save). And it is their own fault Charlie did not save them.