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That was while you were still alive, right? What would have happened if you had remained in a state of rebellion?I did go astray because I took my eyes off Christ. He went after me and brought me back.
But that ain't what the word "κολασιν"/kolasin means. According to the EOB and BDAG.I do too but I think the word "punishment" is superfluous and probably not particularly helpful. You could just say "correction" or "education" rather than "corrective punishment" or "educative/remedial punishment". They would mean the same thing in the universalist paradigm.
That was while you were still alive, right? What would have happened if you had remained in a state of rebellion?
No, it doesn't only work if it is a single benefit. The gospel is the hope worth dying for, the benefits that precede death are trivial in comparison to what the martyrs laid down their life for. If that hope is not an exclusive one, then the gospel that the martyrs believed is void. They laid down their lives and kept the gospel for nothing.
I bristle at the word "punishment".
Although I understand that punishment can be used to correct behavior.
But I see the restorative process, though painful emotionally (wailing and gnashing of teeth), to not be painful physically. Which raises questions about what sort of body we enter the afterlife with. Although, if we can wail and gnash our teeth, that says plenty right there.
I imagine that the restoration of those in need will be like the wood, hay and stubble that burns, leaving the precious metals, etc. And the one left with nothing, as one who escapes through the flames. (total loss, but saved)
Maybe he does not have the book of Hebrew in his Bible.According to the well known Baptist pastor, teacher and theologian named Charles Stanley, I would have lost some of my heavenly rewards.
* * *
Wonderful words but they do not appear as you have quoted them out-of-context.Saint Steven said:* * * I imagine that the restoration of those in need will be like the wood, hay and stubble that burns, leaving the precious metals, etc. And the one left with nothing, as one who escapes through the flames. (total loss, but saved)
Maybe he does not have the book of Hebrew in his Bible.
Hebrews 10:28-31
28 Anyone who rejected the law of Moses died without mercy on the testimony of two or three witnesses.
29 How much more severely do you think someone deserves to be punished who has trampled the Son of God underfoot, who has treated as an unholy thing the blood of the covenant that sanctified them, and who has insulted the Spirit of grace?
30 For we know him who said, "It is mine to avenge; I will repay," and again, "The Lord will judge his people."
31 It is a dreadful thing to fall into the hands of the living God.
A punishment worse than death without mercy. This ain't talking about someone on the sidelines who only heard the gospel. "someone ...who has treated as an unholy thing the blood of the covenant that sanctified them,"
GIGO. FYI neither Charles nor Andy, his son, Stanley are the be all, end all, authority on the Bible. Unlike you and other UR-ites I don't just look for something said by someone, somewhere that supports my assumptions/presuppositions I review multiple sources.That's your interpretation of how it works. Why should I accept your interpretation over his? He even outranks you by having been born when Herbert Hoover was in office
DBH used the word "chastisement".
Have you ever tried checking a Greek lexicon for the correct translation of Greek words?"Chastisement" to "punishment" is like what I have seen over and over in the KJV:
"judgment" changed to "condemnation" as shown by the marginal notes
or
"condemnation" changed to "damnation" again, as shown by the marginal notes.
The KJV's own marginal notes have been a factor in my decision to reject ECT.
@MMXX was suggesting the word chastening. A bit KJV, but seems better than punishment. I like the aspects of reproof, take to task, refine or purify.Gound point, healing is probably the best word to use. Perhaps education, and correction in the sense of "making right", is part of that though because we all have to reach the point where we freely and gladly confess Christ as Lord. We have to learn something about God, and unlearn a lot too probably, to be able to do this.
Have you ever tried checking a Greek lexicon for the correct translation of Greek words?
They are somewhat expensive but the 1957 edition of BAGD, as it was known then, is available free online for review. It is not downloadable. Individual pages can be copied and saved. Drawback the Greek does not display correctly.
A Greek-English Lexicon Gingrich & Danker
The true light, which gives light to everyone, was coming into the world. 10 He was in the world, and the world was made through him, yet the world did not know him. 11 He came to his own, and his own people did not receive him. 12 But to all who did receive him, who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God, 13 who were born, not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man, but of God.What do you consider to be the gospel?
The online lexicon I linked to works with the KJV too. You could check to see if a word in the KJV is mistranslated or not.My argument is not with the Greek, but with the KJV. Thank you for the heads-up.
@MMXX was suggesting the word chastening. A bit KJV, but seems better than punishment. I like the aspects of reproof, take to task, refine or purify.
chasten
chā′sən
transitive verb
Synonyms:
- To correct by punishment or reproof; take to task.
- To restrain; subdue.
- To rid of excess; refine or purify.
chastise, castigate, objurgate, correct, moderate, temper, tame, subdue, alter, bawl out, berate, call down, call on the carpet, change, chew out, chew up, chide, dress down, have words, jaw, lambast, lambaste, lecture, modify, rag, rebuke, remonstrate, reprimand, reproof, scold, take to task, trounce