It seems to me internet discussions of controversial topics like Universalism inevitably end up in the weeds of “my verses” versus “your verses.” Such discussions never really go anywhere except deeper into the weeds.
I thus avoid the “my verses” approach. I took on 1 Corinthians 15:22 in post #4496 only because I was specifically challenged and because demolishing the Universalist interpretation was so easy it was kind of fun. As anyone can see, the Universalist who issued the challenge had no substantive response at all. The only substantive response I received was that the many other Pauline verses I cited arguably point toward Annihilationism. OK – and how does
this help the Universalist? The salient point is, those verses, from the author of 15:22 himself, demolish the Universalist interpretation.
Although Universalists thank CF for allowing discussion of this topic, the fact is that it’s walled off in Controversial Christian Theology. Since the fate of the unsaved isn’t even addressed in CF’s Statement of Faith, surely this tells us something? It appears to me here, as elsewhere, that Universalism threads attract mostly (by a large majority) strong proponents. I haven’t posted under the delusion I’m likely to change any minds; I know how that goes, whether the topic is Universalism or gay marriage. I post for those, if there are any, who may be on the fence.
I'm going to say what I have to say regardless of whether it falls on deaf ears or is ignored, as I anticipate it will be because that's the game.
Emerging from the weeds to the 30,000-foot level, the broad and interrelated points I would make are:
1. Throughout the NT, and specifically from the mouth of Jesus, are dire warnings about the false teachers and false doctrines that will characterize the End Times. Every liberalization of the Gospel in recent times has been in the direction of making it weaker, more toothless and more palatable to modern sensibilities. The trend toward Universalism is squarely in this vein. If I were inclined toward Universalism, this would trouble me
greatly. Does anyone seriously think Universalism is the one trend that just happens to be the exception?
2. As the scholar I quoted above suggests, the reshaping of the Gospel to mesh with modern sensibilities is part and parcel of the general trend toward postmodernism, post-postmodernism and beyond. There is no absolute truth. There is no real accountability. Morals are flexible and evolving, if objective morality exists at all. Deconstruction is the order of the day. Religious language is philosophically meaningless. Tolerance is the ultimate commandment and virtue.
At least two, and more probably three, generations below me have been indoctrinated into this mindset. If affects (infects?) every area of thought, secular and religious. Universalism is one very clear manifestation.
3. Dr. Michael S. Heiser,
Dr. Michael Heiser - Biblical Scholar | Author | Semitic Languages Expert, is a world-class OT scholar and expert in the Semitic languages. His books
The Unseen Realm and
Supernatural, both of which I’ve read in the unabridged editions, have been groundbreaking even among those who don’t completely accept all he says. His specialty is ancient Jewish cosmology, meaning the way the ancient Jews actually viewed the heavenly and earthly realms.
Dr. Heiser is strongly opposed to Universalism. His point is that Universalists conveniently
ignore the entire OT. Their God simply cannot be reconciled with the OT God. If Universalism were true, the OT would simply make no sense. No matter what spin someone may put on certain NT verses, I would think this disconnect with the OT would be extremely troubling.
4. As I showed in post #4496, the proper focus must be on the NT
as a whole, not on verses such as 1 Corinthians 15:22 that are pulled out of context and made to fit a Universalist theology. By proof-texting, the Bible can made to say almost anything. The fact is, the thrust of the NT is solidly non-Universalist, which is why Universalism is all its permutations has traditionally been regarded as heretical.
Consistently, it seems to me, those who hold fringe positions allow their preferred theology to drive their interpretation of the Bible. The proper approach is for the clear thrust of the Bible to drive the theology.
5. Universalism is dangerous in two respects: (1) It may lead Christians to believe their Christian walk is irrelevant to salvation; and (2) it may lead non-Christians to believe that whether they reject the Christian message in this lifetime is irrelevant. How much more dangerous could any doctrine be?
These considerations, taken together, cause me to condemn Universalism and steer as far from it as I can. It is undeniably appealing in human terms (superficially at least), but it is
not what God has communicated to mankind.