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Why an eternal hell? (2)

UnionJack

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For me, this was best explained by evangelist John Piper.

I can't find the exact video on youtube, but it goes something like this:

Hell is eternal because the one we sin against (God) is eternal.

If we were to commit a crime against some random guy on the street, VS the same crime against the president or prime minister of a country, which crime would be treated more harshly? Surely, the one with the greater power (the president). But God is infintley more powerful than the leader of a country. What happens when we commit a crime against God then? Does the punishment also increase, since his authority increases?

So what happens, when we commit such a felony against one who is immortal, and eternal? The punishment is eternal.

Even for Christians, it may be hard to understand, or even agree with this. But that is because we do not, and will not ever fully understand God, his sheer dominance, or his full power and everlasting glory.
 
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Person of

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For me, this was best explained by evangelist John Piper.

I can't find the exact video on youtube, but it goes something like this:

Hell is eternal because the one we sin against (God) is eternal.

If we were to commit a crime against some random guy on the street, VS the same crime against the president or prime minister of a country, which crime would be treated more harshly? Surely, the one with the greater power (the president). But God is infintley more powerful than the leader of a country.

So what happens, when we commit such a felony against one who is immortal, and eternal? The punishment is eternal.

Even for Christians, it may be hard to understand, or even agree with this. But that is because we do not, and will not ever fully understand God, his sheer dominance, or his full power and everlasting glory.
That's not a Biblical explanation. It doesn't even make sense.
 
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createdtoworship

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I don't know how you interpret those verses that way. I mean, "some to everlasting LIFE, others to shame and everlasting contempt." How does that NOT mean that one one side is life, and on the other is death, the absence of life?

I think you're mistaken about the words referring to punishment and life. Eternal punishment doesn't mean eternal life. When I say my dog is dead forever, it doesn't mean she's now been in a state of dying for the last five years and shall continue to be dying for all eternity. It means she's dead, and she'll be dead forever. She had to take the punishment for her actions, we had to put her to sleep, as they say. Eternal judgment, no way to escape, her death is never going to end.

And again, in the very beginning of the bible, God denies sinners eternal life. He blocks their access to the tree of life so they would NOT live forever. What would be the point if they were already immortal to begin with?

it only says eternal death a few places, most of the time Hell is described as eternal judgement, punishment,. everlasting contempt. etc.
 
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UnionJack

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I may not have done justice to John's explanation in the video (or his example). I saw it a while ago, still trying to find it. But the essence of it was, a crime we commit against God is not the same a crime against a person on earth, or a person on earth with authority. It is infinitely worse, so the punishment is infinitely worse as well.

Piper's example with the person on the street, and president emulated the fact that punishment or severity of any given crime increases as the authority of the one who is offended by it increases. And in this case God is at the top of the food chain, which warrants the highest punishment as well.
 
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Person of

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I may not have done justice to John's explanation in the video (or his example). I saw it a while ago, still trying to find it. But the essence of it was, a crime we commit against God is not the same a crime against a person on earth, or a person on earth with authority. It is infinitely worse, so the punishment is infinitely worse as well.

Piper's example with the person on the street, and president emulated the fact that punishment or severity of any given crime increases as the authority of the one who is offended by it increases. And in this case God is at the top of the food chain, which warrants the highest punishment as well.
That makes more sense. I just don't agree with the parallels in your first example.
 
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dollarsbill

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I'm not so sure that verse is about sinners who died and are facing judgment, especially since - as far as I know - that idea isn't found anywhere else in the bible, and the fact that it says many times that sinners will die as opposed to have eternal life (yes, I know you and I agree on what 'life' and 'death' means).

I think that to determine what the bible says about something we must look at the whole bible to get the whole picture. It seems to me that the really important stuff is said several times and in several ways. I don't see the idea of eternal torment for the sinner in general, or the idea that God forces them to keep sinning forever in particular, in the bible as a whole.
Rev 22 isn't about eternity?
 
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FredVB

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Originally Posted by Fred V B
It is possible to be punished enough. That is separate, in eternity souls are not eliminated, and suffering does not pay for them to be clean from sin. Christ alone would do that, but still what is suffered is fair for each according to their sins.
Does the bible say that suffering doesn't pay for them to be clean from sin? Like, God punishes you for sinning, but you're not actually paying for your crime?
Romans 6:7
because anyone who has died has been set free from sin.


From what the Bible says, our suffering does not pay for us to be clean from sin, it is effective through Christ alone because of who he is and what he did, no mere human is who he is, and cannot do what he did. In this world there can be accounted payment for crime, but it does not pay for sin. Sin is the offense to Yahweh God, and it will necessarily be dealt with, through Christ where there is the right response to his grace toward us, or in eternity for those who go without that response to be spared in Christ and come restored to God in relationship.

There will be an end made to sin, and there will be no more choice possible for sin, either by being free totally from sin with a new incorruptible nature with Christ in eternity, or under the fair judgment without him deprived of any way to make such choices ever again. So after dying there is no more sin to continue.

In the old testament times there was still forgiveness to people for sin, and it was with them having faith, with riight works coming with it, counted righteous because their faith in response to God's grace is fulfilled in Christ who then came and with what he did they are covered.
 
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createdtoworship

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For me, this was best explained by evangelist John Piper.

I can't find the exact video on youtube, but it goes something like this:

Hell is eternal because the one we sin against (God) is eternal.

If we were to commit a crime against some random guy on the street, VS the same crime against the president or prime minister of a country, which crime would be treated more harshly? Surely, the one with the greater power (the president). But God is infintley more powerful than the leader of a country. What happens when we commit a crime against God then? Does the punishment also increase, since his authority increases?

So what happens, when we commit such a felony against one who is immortal, and eternal? The punishment is eternal.

Even for Christians, it may be hard to understand, or even agree with this. But that is because we do not, and will not ever fully understand God, his sheer dominance, or his full power and everlasting glory.
good illustration!
 
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holo

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Well, it's not true for me. The Bible says if you don't choose Jesus freely of your own will and believe He is the Son of God who died for your sins then you don't know him. You can't "inherit" real faith.
I don't know if it matters exactly why you believe. Most christians I know have never had much of a "salvation experience," they've just continued in the faith they grew up in.

Anyway, the bible also says faith is God's gift, I'm not so sure it's anything we choose. Either you're convinced or you're not. But you can choose what to do with what you believe is true. Further, the bible says we were chosen before the foundation of the world (I believe that refers to us believers, but correct me if I'm wrong). So the idea that salvation is our choice only is incomplete at best.

How can you be a man if you don't have free will? Do you know what people without free will are called? They're called prisoners.
So maybe we're God's "prisoners" then. As is the rest of His creation. Personally, I'd much rather have God run the entire show than us getting to mess it all up against His will.

By the way, will we still have "free will" in heaven? If we do, it must be possible to sin there :)

Don't misunderstand those passages. God works through the hearts of men and turns evil intentions into His good.
But that's what the passages do say, though. Anyway, in effect it doesn't matter if it's God Himself doing it or He's just allowing the devil to do it. He is almighty.

So now your position is that God forced mankind to be evil?
God works all things according to His own plan, He's got the whole world in His hand, to put it that way. Like I said, I don't know how to reconcile God judging people for evil when ultimately it's God's own decision that we be evil.

God turns evil into good, he doesn't create the evil in the first place.
He did create the devil, and the tree of knowledge of good and evil.

It's not his plan but he knew it would happen and planned for our salvation before he made us, yes.
I find it hard to believe that God didn't plan for it, but knew it would happen anyway. Couldn't He have chosen differently?

Do you have a better version of creation perhaps? There is no other version of reality other than the one God created. The potential for sin is a side effect of our spiritual imperfection alongside a holy and righteous God.
Sure, if I was to create the world I'd do this and that. I'm not accusing God, just questioning His work because I don't understand it.

If God was to eliminate sin, he'd have to eliminate you and me. And everybody else.
And that's what He did on the cross, where you and I were crucified with Christ :)

Your understanding of these concepts is incomplete.
Probably. What about yours?

Those are common questions but faith in Jesus Christ should be your convincing factor.
What do you mean?

I think it works the other way around. You're no longer scared of hell (because you don't think it has eternal significance) and therefore you're free to question.
I fought long and hard to get to the point where I even dared to ask the question if the whole hell thing might be different than the belief I grew up with. Seeing how little support you can find for that in the bible, learning about the word aion and so forth, and not least trying to make it fit in with what the bible otherwise says about God being righteous and such, I was happy to find that I'd been wrong.

Some christians automatically get alarmed when they hear preached a message that is better than the one they already believe. Like when someone says God's grace extends further than they thought, that we're not under the law, or that eternal torment thankfully enough just isn't true. They instinctively oppose "good news" because they see it as a watering-down of the True Gospel(tm).

Fear is the beginning of wisdom. If you don't fear God, you won't be wise. End of story.
Fear of God doesn't mean to be scared of God. Fear of hell isn't the beginning of wisdom.

You're struggling with those questions but a lot of people aren't. That's because they've accepted that fear is the beginning of wisdom - and their relationship with God and appreciation of his love is deeper for it.
My appreciation for God's love grew 423809752039485703294 times bigger when I realised He's not the ultimate sadist. It's wonderful not having to try to reconcile the idea of an ultimately loving God with the idea that He's also going to torture most people forever. My whole relationship with God was based on terror. For people who believe in hell as eternal torment, escaping that neverending torture is their best reason for seeking God in the first place. Think about it - people are seeking God not because He's good, but because if they don't He's going to punish them worse than you can imagine if they don't.

It's his will to be unjust then? Why don't you just apply what we consistently know about God. Start with the fact that he's good and just and he is love and wrath and work backwards. Don't accept any position that you know is inconsistent with his unchanging character. But don't ignore any aspects of his character either. You can't have God's love without his wrath and his justice.
Sure you can, He's already provided that for everybody. I'll have all of His love and none of His wrath.

If you start with the fact that God is love and just you can't possibly come to the conclusion that He is also hate and infinitely unfair.

It's never about the object in question or about "stealing". God doesn't distinguish between sins for a clear reason: because all sins amount to rebellion against God. God set a "way" for man. To choose to sin is to choose your own "way". If you choose your own "way," you're making yourself God. However God only has room for himself being God, so what sin basically represents is waging war on God, becoming his enemy.
Sure God distinguishes between sins. Some He bears over with, and sometimes in the bible we see God punishing people when their sin reaches "their full measure."

The child stealing a candy bar isn't making him- or herself God.

God did all that voluntarily because he chose to, to save us. That has nothing to do with whether God's character accepts sin. God humbled himself to human form to achieve this.
I was thinking about the argument that "God can't be near sin," which when coupled with the idea that we all have eternal life whether we get saved or not, results in the idea that God is forced to expel us from His presence forever. But God isn't afraid of sin, He's not allergic to it, He can stand it more than any human ever could. He washed the feet of sinners and ate with them.

Doesn't it just show you how desperate God is to give his children a chance?
To me it shows the exact opposite. That the creator of the world, the most powerful being imaginable, is in fact unable to save any but a few of the ones He loves unconditionally but instead is forced to torture them, because one man destroyed God's perfect work.

I personally believe all the sin has the potential to be blotted out on the cross, but if you don't believe in it and you don't honor it - it will not be applied to you. It can't be - because you have to CHOOSE to respond to the Holy Spirit calling you to repentance. It is all a work of God but God does not force any one to accept His son.
As I mentioned above, I think that's at best an incomplete view of things. I don't see Paul, for example, choosing to respond to God's calling, or Judas or the Romans/jews having any choice (someone had to do it).

Doesn't follow the scriptures though, unfortunately. The Bible is fraught with mention of people being unsaved.
Yes, but maybe "saved" doesn't only mean where you go when you die.

1 Timothy 4:10
That is why we labor and strive, because we have put our hope in the living God, who is the Savior of all people, and especially of those who believe.

It may be that we all will be saved eventually (and some of us even while we're on earth), especially if punishment in hell isn't eternal. It would make sense in light of God being God and His will being done and God reconciling all things to Himself.

1 Cor 15:21-28
For since death came through a man, the resurrection of the dead comes also through a man. For as in Adam all die, so in Christ all will be made alive. But each in turn: Christ, the firstfruits; then, when he comes, those who belong to him. Then the end will come, when he hands over the kingdom to God the Father after he has destroyed all dominion, authority and power. For he must reign until he has put all his enemies under his feet. The last enemy to be destroyed is death. For he “has put everything under his feet.” Now when it says that “everything” has been put under him, it is clear that this does not include God himself, who put everything under Christ. When he has done this, then the Son himself will be made subject to him who put everything under him, so that God may be all in all.
 
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holo

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Piper's example with the person on the street, and president emulated the fact that punishment or severity of any given crime increases as the authority of the one who is offended by it increases. And in this case God is at the top of the food chain, which warrants the highest punishment as well.
But God doesn't follow our social structures. If a tiny offense brings infinite guilt, then a tiny good deed should also bring infinite redemption.

It also assumes that God is somehow forced to punishe people infinitely more than they actually deserve. You do NOT deserve eternal torture for stealing something, for example. Hitler doesn't deserve eternal torture.
 
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holo

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So after dying there is no more sin to continue.
Then why would the punishment continue?

In the old testament times there was still forgiveness to people for sin, and it was with them having faith, with riight works coming with it, counted righteous because their faith in response to God's grace is fulfilled in Christ who then came and with what he did they are covered.
Does the bible say that?
 
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joep222

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God is holy, perfect and just. He is of infinite value, honor and worth. When we sin, we sin against the holy, perfect and infinite God. Thus the sin is infinite offense. For justice to be just, the punishment must meet the offense. Thus we are all deserving of infinite Hell.

But God in His richness and love, offers us unmerited favor in Jesus Christ for all who would abandon their rebellion and put their trust in Jesus.
 
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createdtoworship

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I'm not so sure that verse is about sinners who died and are facing judgment, especially since - as far as I know - that idea isn't found anywhere else in the bible, and the fact that it says many times that sinners will die as opposed to have eternal life (yes, I know you and I agree on what 'life' and 'death' means).

I think that to determine what the bible says about something we must look at the whole bible to get the whole picture. It seems to me that the really important stuff is said several times and in several ways. I don't see the idea of eternal torment for the sinner in general, or the idea that God forces them to keep sinning forever in particular, in the bible as a whole.

so you admit there are verses for eternal hell, lets talk about those.
 
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createdtoworship

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When I say my dog is dead forever, it doesn't mean she's now been in a state of dying for the last five years and shall continue to be dying for all eternity. It means she's dead, and she'll be dead forever.

this quote is what I mean that God does not follow our social structures.(according to your own quote) (not Holiness and Judgement)

http://www.christianforums.com/t7682234-2/#post61280606
 
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