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that would be unorthodox. Souls have no mass and live forever. So it's the same soul that lives forever in heaven, so your saying that one can live eternally in heaven yet annihilate in hell? Why would a soul cease to exist in one extreme but not the other?I don't think that eternal punishment is an actual thing. I spent most of my early time on the bible focused on what it says about how we should live, only later starting to take a closer look at it one bit at a time, and I haven't got to that topic yet in any detail. What I have found is that much of what is expressed is conceptual and incomplete, more of a framework than a comprehensive point by point, categorical description of the ideas it contains. There's an lot of empty space, as in Abraham's story, for example.
That is my version of the cosmological argument (interesting it is similar to kalam), but you initially said we talked about entropy, and we did not. Maybe you are confusing this with some of your other debates.Well, your opening statement borrows heavily from it.
that would be unorthodox. Souls have no mass and live forever. So it's the same soul that lives forever in heaven, so your saying that one can live eternally in heaven yet annihilate in hell? Why would a soul cease to exist in one extreme but not the other?
the church fathers all believed in eternal hell. Yes, it is a new thing. We should read the Bible and trust that what it says, it was meant by God to say. Not twist the Bible to mean other things because it is not popular among some people. That is a band wagon fallacy, or fallacy of popularity.I'm a former Christian of over thirty years, I get it. A non-eternal hell is relatively new within American evangelical Christianity.
oh, it's very well established. But I have a thread on it, I would ask that you continue this discussion there. Eternal Conscious Hell Fire is completely JustifiedI'm saying it's hard to actually get those ideas from the bible, or confirm them in the bible, once you move past one or two regularly quoted scriptures. In my experience few reguarly held beliefs beyond the very basics have any kind of consistent or watertight scriptural support.
Oh the language is very clear too, but again I ask that you continue this discussion here:What seems clear, in translation and from a modern mindset, quickly becomes unclear once you start taking a more thorough look at it, then becomes clearer again, albeit different, once you have spent the time to study the language used and what it meant to people at the time, and what it means in relation to other relevant material.
I'm a former Christian of over thirty years, I get it. A non-eternal hell is relatively new within American evangelical Christianity.
Scripture is pretty clear, if you dont believe the story, you are in trouble.
Now, as time has gone on and many christians have not been able to reconcile this god who loves all, with this thought of punishing if you dont fall in line, has caused some christians, to ignore for morality reasons.
I have long said, any theology, that condems 2/3 of the worlds population for believing the wrong theology or not believing at all, is a morally bankrupt theology.
Oh the language is very clear too, but again I ask that you continue this discussion here:
Eternal Conscious Hell Fire is completely Justified
You're preachin' to the choir.the church fathers all believed in eternal hell. Yes, it is a new thing. We should read the Bible and trust that what it says, it was meant by God to say. Not twist the Bible to mean other things because it is not popular among some people. That is a band wagon fallacy, or fallacy of popularity.
That is a band wagon fallacy, or fallacy of popularity.
We didn’t talk about entropy specifically, but both your opening argument and the later-surfacing entropy argument were being used as springboards into very kalam-like arguments.That is my version of the cosmological argument (interesting it is similar to kalam), but you initially said we talked about entropy, and we did not. Maybe you are confusing this with some of your other debates.
Atheists aren’t allowed to post there, just so you know.I have asked people to continue this discussion on the proper thread:
Eternal Conscious Hell Fire is completely Justified
and not to post off topic here anymore.
thank you for respecting the fact we are keeping things on topic here.
I don't know of anyone, first hand that loves the idea that people will burn in hell forever. It would be sort of morbid for a human to think so. The bible strictly condemns not to rejoice when someone fails. Proverbs 24:17. If someone does think hell is a funny thing, they are in sin.It's the other way round, I would say. A lot of people love the fire and brimstone stuff.
I will create one in outreach.Atheists aren’t allowed to post there, just so you know.
I don't know of anyone, first hand that loves the idea that people will burn in hell forever. It would be sort of morbid for a human to think so. The bible strictly condemns not to rejoice when someone fails. Proverbs 24:17. If someone does think hell is a funny thing, they are in sin.
Yes, not old In Christianity/Judaism as a whole though, as in there isn’t a coherent idea that matches all of the references to an afterlife.
What seems clear, in translation and from a modern mindset, quickly becomes unclear once you start taking a more thorough look at it, then becomes clearer again, albeit different, once you have spent the time to study the language used and what it meant to people at the time, and what it means in relation to other relevant material.
Or it's eternal, or it's the nature of the multi-verse to generate universes, or it's part of an endless chain of universes dying and being born, or ...
I have a logical question for you, an honest one; in regards to an apparent 'dilemma'....
If you assert that there MUST exist a timeless agency, which created everything we know today, how is this ANY MORE probable than another person's assertion of infinite regress?
What does it mean to be made by itself? That seems incoherent since a thing would have to exist already in order to do any creating. It sounds like you’re saying all things must have been made. But then that should apply to your god as well, and it runs us into an infinite regress. If you want to say your god is the exception to this rule, then there’s no reason the universe itself can’t be that exception too.
Ah. Had a lot of experience of beings "who exist outside of time," have you?
Do you have any evidence that such creatures are possible?
that is just an ad hominem.
And just so you know, the author was an atheist scientist, and these are some of the arguments that converted him to christianity.
Interesting. Those are the arguments that I’m pointing to that’s causing people to leave the faith...
Like CS lewis, anthony flew, and hundreds of other great intellectuals.
I don’t consider either of those to be intellectuals.