My version of predestination does let everybody off the hook, freeing all the "slaves to sin".
But my version of salvation is very different than Calvin or Augustine.
In my version of salvation, the only thing being saved is Christ.
This means that no people will be saved. No Jews, no Greeks, no men, no women. Nobody.
People are part of the problem and represent a damned Christ...dying for a damned Christ.
If people were to disappear forever, it would return Christ to Christ's normal state of being, which is the experience of Self-As-Heaven.
Once you can accept this, the theo-logical problems of Calvin's predestination theories are solved.
As long as people are part of the equation, theology will perpetuate damnation...the damnation of Christ.
It's true enough: the damned don't really have free will.
The damned, who substitute for Christ, are "slaves to sin"...which means they have no free will.
It appears the damned make choices, but they don't.
There is only one choice still open for the damned to choose, which does not involve slavery to a determined existence: the damned can choose to return to Christ: AS CHRIST.
This let's the damned off the hook for everything they seem to have done.
At this point, the world of people fades into a distant memory, and finally, from memory itself.
Poof! It's gone.
Why?
Because the world of people does not exist in the first place.
A world of people was a thought experiment than never went beyond conjecture.
A world of people never reaches the point of reality, and remains not more important than a distant dream.
Technically, nothing actually happened.
But while things seem to happen, all happenstance is pre-scripted; pre-determined; fore-told.
Likewise, the choice to return to Christ is also a matter of DESTINY.
This is a lot like UNIVERSAL SALVATION.
Thing is, Christ is the true UNIVERSE, which again, is the only thing being saved.