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Thank you for that. It might be a minority position here, but you are on firm footing there. The second death is not death at all if it is eternal suffering.
Thanks OGW
Gideon
Yes, denial of eternal life in the Kingdom with no chance of change. No more life, over, kaput. But some humans love the concept of payback. Theirs will not be the Kingdom.Everlasting punishment is just what it sounds like.
Do you=espouse to this belief? Not the error of it, but that one being anathema to you... dead to you?
blessings,
Gids
To hear some folks talk, one would think that I am committing a terrible sin by not believing that hell lasts forever.
The problem is, when you find out that Hell is a man made doctrine, and you use that as licence to sin. If you do that, you were never really a follower of Christ anyway. I've even heard some people say "if there is no such thing as hell, why bother being a Christian" Well, that tells you what that person's reason is for "following Christ"
Not really.
Why do you discuss this topic here instead of the Orthodox Forum?
The answer to the question you pose is the same as your answer to this question: Do you believe others who believe in everlasting torment, are bad people?
Why don't you believe that hell lasts forever? That's my question. Don't you believe that God is a just Judge and that you and I are deserving of eternal separation from him unless Jesus rescues us through his death and resurrection? God does love his world as its Creator, but humanity rebelled against him with a rebellion we all had when we were conceived and born. All of us are worthy of eternal death because God demands that we be perfect the way Jesus called us to be in the Sermon on the Mount. God's special love for believers delivers us through Jesus by the Holy Spirit.
Do you believe that God inspired the Bible as his revelation of himself, our condition, and our relationship with him? If you don't, I challenge you to read it through from beginning to end and then come back here with your questions.
Oh, I believe in eternal suffering, but only for rebellious eternal beings who has seen the glory of God first hand and chose their own path.
Now that? That deserves eternal punishment.
blessings,
Gideon
Well, your belief is not in keeping with the testimony of God's word which tells us that it does last forever. (Matthew 25:46; 2 Thessalonians 1:9; Revelation 14:9-11) Who are you to deny God's word? Why should people let you publicly espouse a false belief unchallenged?
Just to clarify: The terms "death" and "dead" in Scripture have more than one meaning, as do many of the words found in Scripture. It is...convenient for the annihilationist to restrict the meaning of "death" to utter destruction/annihilation, but this is playing fast-and-loose with Scripture, I think. Here are some verses that illustrate that "dead" or "death" in the Bible have a variety of meanings:
Ephesians 2:1 "...dead in trespasses and sins..." - Neither physical death nor destruction are in view in this phrase, but a spiritual condition.
Colossians 3:3 - "For you are dead and your life is hid with Christ in God." - Again, here "dead" is used of a spiritual condition, not of a state of annihilation or destruction.
Revelations 3:1 "...you have a name that you are alive, but you are dead." - Here, too, "dead" is not used to refer to physical death or annihilation but to a spiritual state.
James 2:17 "Thus also faith, by itself, if it have not works, is dead." - In this instance, "dead" means something like "inoperative," or "inactive," literally "failing to produce works."
Adam and Eve "died" on the day they ate of the Forbidden Fruit, but their dying was not a literal physical death and it certainly wasn't annihilation that they experienced, but, rather, separation from God. (Isaiah 59:2) W.E. Vine comments:
"Death is the opposite of life; it never denotes non-existence. As spiritual life is "conscious existence in communion with God," so spiritual death is "conscious existence in separation from God.
Death...is always, in Scripture, viewed as the penal consequence of sin..."
(Vine's Expository Dictionary of Old and New Testament Words, pg. 276)
Romans 8:13 "..if through the Spirit you put to death the deeds of the body, you shall live..." Annihilation or destruction is not meant here by "death" but the halting or cessation of the sinful deeds of the body.
What, then, should be made of the phrase "second death"? Is it speaking of destruction and/or annihilation? Well, the first death doesn't mean this. If "death" means "annihilation," how is a second death possible? "Death" under such a definition would mean that at the first death, the body winks out of existence. But there's usually a corpse and a grave, and, the Bible tells us, judgment of the person to follow. Clearly, then, "death" doesn't mean "annihilation" - not in the instance of the death of the physical body, nor in the instance of the ruination of the unrepentant sinner suffering the "second death" in hell. Primarily, "death," communicates separation, as Vine explained in the quotation above - the soul/spirit from the body at the first death, and the sinner from his Maker at the second death.
To hear some folks talk, one would think that I am committing a terrible sin by not believing that hell lasts forever.
Hell is as an important aspect of the Christian faith as Jesus' resurrection.
If that is so, why is the OT completely silent on the issue? The Jews of the NT had no such idea of such a place.
Jesus, therefore, being an orthodox Jew, would not have spoken of it.
Why is eternal punishment rather than healing of the sinner and restoration of that one so important to the Gospel? How is that Good News at all, especially for the billions who never even heard of Jesus?
I suppose, but I find it counterproductive to discuss Hell with people who don't even see it the same way as OrthodoxBecause Apokatastasis can only be discussed in this forum, according to the forum rules. I'd rather not spend any time in the Sin Bin for breaking the rules.
Yahuweh is not subject to the clay pot He shapes, especially if it is one opposed to Him.
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