GES_wordmark_rect_black.png

P.O. Box 1308, Denton, TX 76202

  • About
    • Home
    • Beliefs
    • Staff
    • Board of Directors
  • Resources
    • Grace in Focus Blog
    • Grace in Focus International Blogs
    • Grace in Focus Radio
    • Grace in Focus Magazine
    • Free eBooks
    • Journal of the GES
    • Book Reviews
    • Partners in Grace Newsletter
    • Audio Messages
    • Videos
    • Email Subscription
    • Online Tracts
  • Store
    • Main Page
    • On Sale
    • Return Policy
    • Your Cart
    • Your Account
  • Events
  • Seminary
    • Seminary Info
    • GES Seminary Curriculum
    • GES Seminary Faculty
  • Connect
    • Contact Us
    • Free Grace Church and Bible Study Tracker
    • Free Grace Jobs
    • Ministry Links
  • Donate
    • One Time Donation
    • Monthly Donation
    • Your Account
  • Search
  • About
    • Home
    • Beliefs
    • Staff
    • Board of Directors
  • Resources
    • Grace in Focus Blog
    • Grace in Focus International Blogs
    • Grace in Focus Radio
    • Grace in Focus Magazine
    • Free eBooks
    • Journal of the GES
    • Book Reviews
    • Partners in Grace Newsletter
    • Audio Messages
    • Videos
    • Email Subscription
    • Online Tracts
  • Store
    • Main Page
    • On Sale
    • Return Policy
    • Your Cart
    • Your Account
  • Events
  • Seminary
    • Seminary Info
    • GES Seminary Curriculum
    • GES Seminary Faculty
  • Connect
    • Contact Us
    • Free Grace Church and Bible Study Tracker
    • Free Grace Jobs
    • Ministry Links
  • Donate
    • One Time Donation
    • Monthly Donation
    • Your Account
  • Search
Home
→
Blog
→
Is God Good?

Is God Good?

February 20, 2026 by Ken Yates in Blog - Assurance, Calvinism, Elect, Gen 3:1, John 3:16, limited atonement

At the last GES national conference, Geoff Stevens spoke on the dismantling of dispensationalism. One of the points of his presentation is that if we reject a plain, common-sense way of interpreting the Scriptures (dispensationalism), we will lose sight of God’s goodness. 

Some will say that this is ungracious or an overstatement. But I would like to discuss how Calvinism denies God’s goodness. 

Most readers of this blog have probably heard a sermon on Gen 3:1, when Satan asks Eve in Eden: “Has God indeed said, ‘You shall not eat of every tree of the garden?’” Many have pointed out that Satan is questioning God’s goodness here. He leaves off the fact that God told them they could freely eat from all the trees of the garden except one. Satan implies in this question that God is a killjoy. He is holding something back from Adam and Eve. Whatever Eve might have thought about all God had done for them, He wasn’t as good as she thought. 

Who can listen to the Calvinist view of eternal salvation and conclude that God is good? Once again, some will accuse me of being ungracious. Surely, Calvinists believe that God is good. Don’t they? 

But a five-point Calvinist says that God chose only a small group of people to be eternally saved. This small group is called the elect. If you are not one of the elect, you have no hope. Whether you are of the elect or not was determined long before you were born, and there is nothing you can do about it. 

To make matters worse, you can never know in this life whether you belong to the elect. Even if you believe John 3:16, there is no guarantee that it applies to you. If you are not one of the elect, you only think you believe it. Either you didn’t really believe, or you will deny that you believe it at some later date. After you die, you will find out the truth: You never had any hope of eternal life. You were destined before you were born to an eternity of torment in the lake of fire. 

I cannot imagine believing such things. I cannot imagine the anxiety and torment it would produce. Nobody who believes such things can honestly say that God is good. 

The most he could say is that God is good to the elect. But since nobody can know whether they are part of that group, nobody can, as an individual, say that God is good. The non-elect were born into this world, destined for hell, and with no hope. The Calvinist will say they all deserve it. But the one thing he can’t say is that these people should proclaim, “God is good!” 

Satan told Eve in the garden that God was not good. There is a lot of teaching in Christendom today that says the same thing. In fact, Satan was just suggesting it. Calvinism just comes right out and says it: If you aren’t of the elect (and you probably aren’t), God destined you to hell before you were born. 

Whatever else we say about such a system, it does not describe a good God. Free Grace theology is not like that. We need to get back to the basics: “For God so loved the world, that He gave His only Son that whosoever believes in Him might not perish but have everlasting life.” That applies to everyone. If you believe in Jesus for eternal life, you have it and can never lose it. God is good.  

Subscribe by Email

  • Facebook
  • X
  • Pinterest
  • LinkedIn
Ken_Y

by Ken Yates

Ken Yates (ThM, PhD, Dallas Theological Seminary) is the Editor of the Journal of the Grace Evangelical Society and GES’s East Coast and International speaker. His latest book is Mark: Lessons in Discipleship.

If you wish to ask a question about a given blog, email us your question at ges@faithalone.org.

Recently Added

February 20, 2026

Is God Good?

At the last GES national conference, Geoff Stevens spoke on the dismantling of dispensationalism. One of the points of his presentation is that if we...
February 20, 2026

Must We Believe in the Substitutionary Atonement to Have Everlasting Life?

Welcome to the Grace in Focus podcast. Today, Bob Wilkin and Ken Yates will answer a question about substitutionary atonement. What is the best way...
February 19, 2026

Why Is It Important to Distinguish Between Salvation and Discipleship? 

On February 11, I taught the Ludwick Bible study, and this was one of the questions we considered. I think it is a super question.   In this question, salvation means regeneration, being born again. While the NT...

Grace in Focus Radio

All Episodes

Listen on Apple Podcasts

Listen on Spotify

Listen on YouTube

Grace In Focus Magazine

Grace In Focus is sent to subscribers in the United States free of charge.

Subscribe for Free

The primary source of Grace Evangelical Society's funding is through charitable contributions. GES uses all contributions and proceeds from the sales of our resources to further the gospel of grace in the United States and abroad.

Donate

GES_wordmark_rect_teal.png
  • (940) 270-8827 / ges@faithalone.org
  • 4851 S I-35E Suite 203, Corinth, TX 76210
  • P.O. Box 1308, Denton, TX 76202
Facebook X-twitter Youtube Instagram