Why is it so hard to believe that a all loving all powerful God could not possibly win over someone as hitler? Or even satan himself someday I don’t find that hard to do with a God of the impossible, kind of like what Jesus said with man it is impossible but with God all things are possible. (sorry I threw in that nasty word ALL)
Eternal means never ending and there are those who will have never ending punishment/torment. Here are Greek Lexicons proving the above is true.
KJV Strongs #165 aionios - eternal, for ever, everlasting, world (began).
NT:166
1. without beginning or end, that which always has been and always will be: Qeo/$,
Rom 16:26 (o( mo/no$ ai)w/nio$,
2 Macc 1:25); pneu=ma,
Heb 9:14.
2. without beginning: xro/noi$ ai)wni/oi$,
Rom 16:25; pro/ xro/nwn ai)wni/wn,
2 Tim 1:9;
Titus 1:2; eu)agge/lion, a gospel whose subject-matter is eternal, i. e., the saving purpose of God adopted from eternity,
Rev 14:6.
3. without end, never to cease, everlasting:
2 Cor 4:18 (opposed to pro/skairo$); ai)w/nion au)to/n, joined to thee forever as a sharer of the same eternal life, Philcmon 1:15; ba/ro$ do/ch$,
2 Cor 4:17; basilei/a,
2 Peter 1:11; do/ca,
2 Tim 2:10;
1 Peter 5:10; zwh/ (see
zwh/, 2 b.); klhronomi/a,
Heb 9:15; lu/trwsi$,
Heb 9:12; para/klhsi$,
2 Thess 2:16; skhnai/, abodes to be occupied forever,
Luke 16:9 (the habitations of the blessed in heaven are referred to, cf.
John 14:2 (
(from Thayer's Greek Lexicon, PC Study Bible formatted Electronic Database. Copyright © 2006 by Biblesoft, Inc. All rights reserved.)
NT:166
"The predominant meaning of
aionios, that in which it is used everywhere in the NT, save the places noted above, may be seen in
2 Cor 4:18, where it is set in contrast with
proskairos, lit., 'for a season,' and in
Philem 15, where only in the NT it is used without a noun. Moreover it is used of persons and things which are in their nature
endless, as, e. g., of God,
Rom 16:26; of His power,
1 Tim 6:16, and of His glory,
1 Peter 5:10; of the Holy Spirit,
Heb 9:14; of the redemption effected by Christ,
Heb 9:12, and of the consequent salvation of
men,
5:9, as well as of His future rule,
2 Peter 1:11, which is elsewhere declared to be
without end, Luke 1:33; of the life received by those who believe in Christ,
John 3:16, concerning whom He said, 'they shall
never perish,'
10:28, and of the resurrection body,
2 Cor 5:1, elsewhere said to be 'immortal,'
1 Cor 15:53, in which that life will be finally realized,
Matt 25:46; Titus 1:2.
(from Vine's Expository Dictionary of Biblical Words, Copyright © 1985, Thomas Nelson Publishers.)