So when was limited atonement view codified as being the standard view to be held then?
It was never “codified.” But I do not know when its popularity overtook classic Calvinism. If you look at John Humfrey’s comments in 1692 he acknowledges the division in Calvinism (“you know there are two sorts of such as oppose Arminianism. One that is the high sort, and the other the moderate sort …We that are of this sort, do hold Election to be of particular persons…But Redemption we hold to be universal.”).
But if you have studied the Synod of Dort then you probably ran across it being purposely written to suit either view. The crux of salvation is never, in that document, the Atonement but rather God’s sovereign election and call. "Limited Atonement" that denies Christ's death for the human race is foreign to Calvin and others of that time...except in defense against the misconception they hold that view. So I think it reasonable to hold it arose during the debates over Arminianism, prior to 1619. If you want to know when Calvinism excluded those views of Calvin and others regarding the death of Christ being for the human race, then I suppose the answer is "never." There are still classic Calvinists out there. I think the popularity of the more modern/strict Calvinists is that it adds ammo against Arminianism (regardless of whether that ammo is biblical). It is also more simplistic.
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