Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.
James 4:12
“There is one lawgiver, who is able to save and to destroy: who art thou that judgest another?”
able to save - and to destroy
/again does not use a word that means to kill or slay
Clement, you are correct to point out that Genesis 6:3 may be correctly translated to read "abide in" (ESV) or "remain with" (CSB) as opposed to "contend with" (NIV) or strive with" (NKJ, NAS).
IMO, even if it is translated "abide in", the point is that God decided two things related to mankind: He would destroy all except for Noah's family in a flood and He would cut back man's time on earth to normally be no more that 120 years (although this does not happen instantly). Both of these decisions appear to be in response to mankind's wickedness. Both of these decisions indicate that there comes a point where God wisely chooses to no longer work with people individually, or mankind as a whole.
Is Genesis 6:3 by itself "proof" that Universalism is not true. No, but I believe that it harmonizes with annihilationism much better than with universalism.
What eternal Damnationists commentating re Gen.6:3 don't explain, though, is the idea that if this lifespan is the only chance for salvation, why a loving God would make the lifespan much shorter, thereby giving men less time to find God. And what of those who die at ages 0 to 20? Do they not get the same chances as others living longer? Furthermore, why bring the wicked back to life, if they are totally hardened beyond even the repair of Love Omnipotent? Just to torture them before the unfeeling impotent terminator machine called god sends them to their doom?
You asked why God would raise the unrighteous. God has promised to reveal sins, judge, and pay back those who have sinned against His people. Raising them to judgment allows God to this. It is not wrong. In fact it is right and just. God asks us to patiently accept a lot of injustice in this world and part of the motivation He gives us is a promise that He Himself will pay back those who have done evil and never repented and found forgiveness in Christ:
Actually, I asked:
"why bring the wicked back to life, if they are totally hardened beyond even the repair of Love Omnipotent? Just to torture them before the unfeeling impotent terminator machine called god sends them to their doom?"
Evidently you have no reasonable answer for this.
Therefore, i conclude from this thread:
1] Your caricature of God makes His omnipotence weak & impotent.
2] Your caricature of God also makes Him unjust & unloving.
https://www.tentmaker.org/books/hope_beyond_hell.pdf
Does αιωνιον/aionion mean eternal or does it mean "age(s)," a variable finite period of time?... "It is false, he maintained, to translate that phrase as "everlasting punishment," introducing into the New Testament the concept found in the Islamic Quran that God is going to torture the wicked forever."...
Just because you don't agree with my answer does not mean it is unreasonable. If God does not do what you think He should do (save everyone), this does not make Him weak, omnipotent, unjust, or unloving.
First, the fact that God has not explained to us the reasons and rationale for all His actions should not be used to deny that God will do things which the Bible teaches He will do. The Bible teaches that God will cause the unrighteous to perish (John 3:16), die (Romans 6:23), be destroyed in body and soul (Matthew 10:28), and be burned to ashes (2 Peter 2:6), and that this punishment is an "eternal punishment" (Matthew 25:46).