[QUOTE="TheLostCoin
Our Lord and Savior Himself said that "broad is the way that leads to destruction, and many enter by it,"
To whom did Christ come initially? To the Gentiles or to His people, Israel. Matthew's Gospel is directed towards the Jews. For instance, there is a long genealogy in it which is found nowhere else. That genealogy would mean nothing to Gentiles, but everything to Jews, for it shows Christ as the Son of David, meaning that He was the promised Messiah. There is a very detailed warning, also found in other gospels, regarding the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70 and the end of the Pharisee's rule.
The KJV is not as good a translation as the Young's Literal.
Mat 7:13 'Go ye in through the strait gate, because wide is the gate, and broad the way that is leading to the destruction, and many are those going in through it;
There was a way that was leading to destruction - the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70. The Pharisees and many of the Jews were already on that road. Jesus, as Prophet, was warning those who were listening to abandon that way and believe in Him. During the siege of Jerusalem, the Roman armies pulled back from Jerusalem, allowing all who remembered and believed the words of Jesus to flee to Pella and be saved. The rest perished.
and again, says "Depart, you accursed, into the eternal fire, prepared for the devils and his angels,"
Not what it says at all.
Mat 25:41Then shall he say also to those on the left hand, Go ye from me, the cursed, to the fire, the (aionion) age-during, that hath been prepared for the Devil and his messengers;
Latin translators have turned the word aionion (age-lasting) into the word aeternas (eternal) with no warrant to do so whatsoever, other than their not being able to read Greek properly. The word for eternal is adidios. Oh, but I'm not supposed to believe this nor read the Scriptures in their original language, am I? I'm just supposed to believe whatever someone else tells me, even if Greek scholars say they are wrong.
Sure!
and also says through the Apostle John "But the fearful, and unbelieving, and the abominable, and murderers, and whoremongers, and sorcerers, and idolaters, and all liars, they shall have their portion in the pool burning with fire and brimstone, which is the second death."
And yet St. Paul states quite clearly that the last enemy to be destroyed is death.
1Co 15:26 The last enemy that shall be destroyed is death.
So which is it - does death win or does Christ win?
Take it up with Him. Unless you find Our Savior's and the Apostle John's own words warped.
They have been warped by atrocious interpretations of the Greek in the Scriptures.
Revisionism. The Quintisext Council cites the Council of Carthage as having binding, dogmatic canons, said canons which are found in the Philokalia and have commentary by Saint Nicodemus of the Holy Mountain. Further, the Sixth Ecumenical Council calls Augustine a "most illustrious doctor."
Where is the specific condemnation of Apokatastasis in them? I don't see it. I see Origen condemned, but that was for his specific odd ideas about the pre-existence of souls, to which he attached the idea of Apokatastasis. If the council was condeming that, then were are the condemnations of those historical figures in the Church who taught this openly, such as St. Gregory of Nyssa?
Augustine certainly had problems, but he's a Saint.
So in your world, "saint' has the same meaning as "pope," i.e. infallibility. I could say the same thing. St. Gregory of Nyssa is a saint. He taught final restoration of all things. Get over it. So did St. Isaac of Syria. The real question is, given that saints are not infallible is this - which teaching is more in character with God is love?
Get over it. Saint Irenaeus thought Jesus was 50 and believed that angels reproduced with humans, and Saint Ambrose believed that invoking Jesus's name alone was sufficient for Baptism.
No, that does not follow at all. God does not create people for the display of His power and glory in damning those who oppose Him. Rather, Hell is the experience of the consequences for one consciously choosing to reject the Holy Spirit.
Wow. Talk about not even coming close to the point I was making!!! Let me try again. Of what character would be an all-powerful and all-knowing deity who would create sentient beings able to suffer, who would do so with no intention that they ever be free from that suffering? Does the idea of an eternal, unending punishment meet any kind of critera of just punishment, not only in the form of lex talionis (punishment proportional to the offense) but in the idea that all justice has a goal and end - that end being the rehabilitation of the offender. There is an end point somewhere for the one being punished when the full measure has been given out. (Matthew 5: 25-26) Eternal hell has God violating the very command of justice which He gave to us to follow - lex talionis.
God Himself is goodness. Rejecting Him is embracing evil (which is the absence of goodness), evil leading to suffering.
Correct. And Goodness does not intentionally create rational beings who will fall, fail, and suffer sin without having a remedy for that sin. The transcendent, omnipotent and omniscient Deity has freely created a cosmos whose eschatological consummation will be heaven and hell—so traditional theology tells us. He might have created a different cosmos, one in which all rational beings enjoy eternal beatitude (no everlasting damnation); or, if no such cosmoses were available to be actualized (transworld damnation), he might have decided not to create a cosmos at all. Yet here we are. Before us lies the possibility of eternal happiness in Jesus Christ or everlasting misery. Some reading this article will be saved, but some will be damned. Given the divine freedom, the final responsibility for this outcome lies with the Creator himself. God’s responsibility for the suffering of the damned cannot be mitigated by considerations like creaturely freedom (human beings have brought the outcome upon themselves by their voluntary disobedience; human beings have brought the outcome upon themselves by their voluntary refusal to accept God’s love and mercy). God foreknew the eschatological conclusion yet chose to create this specific cosmos regardless.
Hell exists because otherwise, men would not be able to choose freely, with goodness and the absence of goodness being rendered meaningless. If it were the case that everyone would be saved at the end, goodness would, in fact, be rendered meaningless to us, because those who follow God will have to suffer (bearing our Crosses) and those who reject God will suffer as a consequence of their sins. Both groups will suffer and be saved; so why should one choose God?
Do you think I haven't thought this through? Do you think that these ideas have not been a consideration? St. Iranaeus taught that the suffering we have (which is a direct result of sin) is a part of the process of refining souls. We are in a school of learning to become little gods (God became man so that man might become [a] god). An eternal hell of torment is a complete failure of that school.
Why should one choose God? Because that is what we were made for. Because it is our telos. Because there are rewards for the righteous and punishments for the wicked. Because the glory of following Christ will be immensely higher than the lowness of those who rejected Him. There will be rewards and authority in the next life. St. Paul said we are to judge angels, remember? Do you think that unrepentant sinners will have the same authority, glory, and splendor that the saints of Mount Athos will have?
The idea of an eternal hell not only makes the Cross a gigantic failure, it posits the idea that rather than ending sin and death in the final age, God willingly suspends souls in a state of unrelenting sin and rage against Him. If the stated goal of the Cross is the destruction of sin and death, do you not see a gigantic problem with that?
But suppose you tell me in detail how it is an act of love to create sentient beings that you know will fail and suffer forever. And then tell me what does eternal hell actually accomplish. Tell me why eternal hell is not completely meaningless, other than perhaps the idea of God getting revenge, which flies in the face of Him being immutable and passionless (according to theologians I have read).