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Doesn't Christian universalism discount the Bible passages such as Matthew 25:31-46, especially verse 46. It's Jesus' figurative description of the final judgment, and the last verse is clear about the "goats'" eternal destination. That belief seems to avoid any understanding or acceptance of God's divine quality of justice, which makes his grace all the more amazing! Recently, I have read the OT prophets; those books and Romans 1:18-25 make clear that all of us are under God's just verdict of "guilty" until God frees us through Jesus' death to receive his pronouncement of "not guilty."
I agree with you that Matthew 25:46 "And these will go away into eternal punishment, but the righteous into eternal life." does seem to be saying that the goats' eternal destination is hell. The argument is if the eternal life is literally unending life, then eternal punishment must also be unending torment, ECT. Christian universalism doesn't discount this verse, it just sees a fallacy in this reasoning.
The word "aionios" is the original Greek for both instances of "eternal" in this verse. Let's avoid going into the argument Der Alte gave in his response to you that “aionios” means means “eternal" rather than simply “age enduring” in this context, and assume for the sake of argument that it does mean "eternal" or "everlasting".
“Aionios” is clearly an adjective so it's meaning is going to vary depending upon which noun it qualifies. Let's look at “everlasting.” The basic meaning is indeed everlasting so e.g. an everlasting struggle would indeed be a struggle without end. But an everlasting change, or an everlasting correction, or an everlasting transformation does not mean a process without end, one that never gets completed. Rather it means a process of limited time duration, or even instantaneous event, that ends in an irreversible state. So argument saying that the goats' punishment has to be everlasting because the same word, aionios, was used for the sheep is a fallacious one. It depends on what it is referring to. In the verse it's "punishment" but this is a simple mistranlation of the Greek word "kolasis" which means something more like "remedial punishment". This is something that is corrective and as mentioned about an everlasting correction makes no sense. That would be the universalist view anyway. Whether it right or wrong (and I believe it's right) certainly nothing in the context of Matthew 25 excludes such an interpretation.
But just to say something more about "aionios", it also has a special religious meaning in the New Testament. I'll disagree with Der Alte now and say that it never refers to a temporal process of unending duration, or that's my understanding anyway - I'm not an Ancient Greek linguist expert so I can only go off people who are. On a few occasions such as when Paul spoke of a "mystery that was kept secret for long ages (chronios aioniois) but is now disclosed" (Rom. 16:25-26) the adjective does imply a lengthy period of time. But it could not possibly mean ‘eternal’ or ‘everlasting’ because the secret is "now disclosed".
On other occasions, such as when it is applied to the judgements, gifts, and actions of God, these are eternal in the sense that their source lies in the eternal character and purpose God. One common function of an adjective, after all, is to refer back to the causal source of some action or condition. E.g a selfish act is one that springs from selfish motives. Similarly, when Jude spoke about the fire that consumed Sodom and Gomorrah as an eternal fire, he was not talking about how long it would burn at all, otherwise it would still be burning today, he was instead saying that the fire represented God’s judgement upon the two cities. So the fire was eternal because it was God’s judgement upon these cities - it expressed God’s eternal character and eternal purpose in a special way.
Fire is often used to express God’s eternal love for us in a special, though severe, way. As in Hebrews 12:29 "for indeed our God is a consuming fire" the God is a fire that will eventually consume all that is false within us. In no other way could God perfect all of us and express his eternal love for all of us. And similarly for eternal punishment: like any of God’s eternal actions in time, it is eternal because it has its source in the eternal God himself.
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