Matthew 25:31-46 not only shows the "Second Advent"verse 31, and "Final Judgment" in verse 46, but shows the "Eternal Kingdom" in verse 34
Human life of flesh and blood, does not exist beyond the "Second Advent", "Final Judgment", and "Eternal Kingdom"
This is not what this scripture says. It is an interpretation of what it means. And that interpretation is contrary to the explicit statements of very many scriptures, including all of the last third of Ezekiel, and much of Isaiah and Zechariah.
Just as an example of one small part of what is explicitly stated, read this section:
13 Thus says the Lord GOD: "These
are the borders by which you shall divide the land as an inheritance among the twelve tribes of Israel. Joseph
shall have two portions. 14 You shall inherit it equally with one another; for I raised My hand in an oath to give it to your fathers, and this land shall fall to you as your inheritance. 15 This
shall be the border of the land on the north: from the Great Sea,
by the road to Hethlon, as one goes to Zedad, 16 Hamath, Berothah, Sibraim (which
is between the border of Damascus and the border of Hamath), to Hazar Hatticon (which
is on the border of Hauran). 17 Thus the boundary shall be from the Sea to Hazar Enan, the border of Damascus; and as for the north, northward, it is the border of Hamath.
This is the north side. 18 On the east side you shall mark out the border from between Hauran and Damascus, and between Gilead and the land of Israel, along the Jordan, and along the eastern side of the sea.
This is the east side. 19 The south side, toward the South,
shall be from Tamar to the waters of Meribah by Kadesh, along the brook to the Great Sea.
This is the south side, toward the South. 20 The west side
shall be the Great Sea, from the
southern boundary until one comes to a point opposite Hamath. This
is the west side.
Ezekiel 47:13-20
Here we have an explicit statement of a time when the nation of Israel will have a specific, well defined, border. and the description is so detailed that, even today, it is possible to draw a map of these borders. We know that, from the day these words were spoken to the present, Israel has never had these borders. So we know it is future. And the language does not contain even one "if" clause. It simply says "these are the borders by which you shall divide the land."
And almost the entire next chapter is devoted to specifying how this specific plot of real estate is to be divided among the twelve tribes, with a royal section and a holy section reserved in the middle.
Now all this is either true or it is not true. there can be no middle ground. And it is simply impossible to logically argue that this is merely symbolic. The very language used does not allow such an imagination. For it simply says that this will be.
And this is typical of very many other such explicitly stated prophecies. There is simply no way around them, either they are true, or they are not true. And if they are not true, then the Bible did not come from God. This theory destroys the very fundamentals of the Christian faith.