I've told you already I'm not an arminian. And for the record, there is not one whit of scriptural evidence of any named person who is said to be headed to hell, NOR is there a single named person in the entirety of the Bible ever threatened with such a fate.
Problem?
enjoy!
squint
Thank you for your response. I am still a bit puzzled by your theological stand.
Correct me if I am wrong, but your post seems to express a more or less Universalist Unitarian point of view.
If I read your post right, you seem to believe one of the following ideas:
1) All men will (eventually be saved) and no man will ever be sent to hell (Unitarian Universalist)
2) God may send some people to hell, but he really didn't know who they were when he created them, and still doesn't really know because God does not really know the future (Open Theology)
3) There really isn't such a place as Hell. When those who are not saved die, they will just be erased from existence (Jehovah's Witnesses)
4) When "good" people who did not repent and follow Christ die, they don't really go to hell, they go to a place where they can work off their sins until they are holy enough to enter into presence of God (Catholic)
5) There really isn't a Hell, just different degrees of heaven. There is, however, a place where devils and ex-mormons will be sent, but the number is very few and everyone else will go to some degree of heaven. (Mormon)
5) God really wants to save everyone, but because he gave men the "gift" of "free will", God is powerless to save people unless they are good enough or smart enough and holy enough to receive the gift of salvation that is offered to all men. (Catholic/Arminian)
So in order to have a meaningful discussion on this issue, perhaps you could tell me exactly which camp best describes your position on soteriology.
Thanks,
Dalmas