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Boanerge

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IMO: There are two kinds of Destruction, being because there are two kinds of Life.

There is this Life and there is Eternal Life. There is a reason why we have this life.

This life is where all the working is done. Not in the Eternal, why? Because the Eternal is like an object moving in one direction forever, what you do in this life determines what direction you will be moving. I don't believe that in the afterlife you will be moving towards fire (Purgatory) so that you can be able to move towards Paradise, that would mean that you never needed Christ but you couldve done it all on your own. If you move towards fire in the Eternal, you move that way for Eternity. No work we put in during the Eternal can change that direction That is the way i see it.

In this life, we can have rewards for the work we do. In the Eternal, only Christ can save you. Christ is not "having faith in purgatory". And the prayers of others can not take you out or "lessen" the fire. It seems that Purgatory sounds like a light version of Hell.

Since a Hell already exists, I am not going to pick purgatory because it sounds easier. It makes it seems like you can escape a piece of Hell in the Afterlife. But if you are there fore a reason, and you do not choose to get out the only way there is (Through Jesus Christ) Then there is no other way to get out. And if you already believe and trust in Jesus, then you were never there in the first place.

So then what happens to all those saints who we believe went into purgatory? What if they didn't, What if belief in Christ takes you directly to Paradise.

Purgatory might have been conceptualized to help understand the afterlife. But if the Blood of Christ was poured upon the saints and anointed them to live as He lived, then why say that the Blood of Christ was not able to take them out of purgatory? Remember? Jesus said "Lord forgive them for they know not what they do!" Do you know what this means? This means that those hidden sins that you did not even know you commited- (always pray to God to help reveal them to you), where you have been taught that Purgatory cleans you of- was in fact already taken up on that Cross.

Christ Died for the Past that you didn't know what you were doing, and Christ died for the sins that you haven't understood yet that you are doing. Now, Being redeemed by His blood, we grow in wisdom and learn the difference between right and wrong, when we learn we have done wrong, don't bring excuses, but bring a repentive heart at the feet of the Lord. When you have done wrong to your brothers and sisters, repent to them also, becuase Jesus said "What you do to them, you do to me." For they are or they will be of the same body as you. And if they have done wrong to you, forgive them. We forgive others because this is God's way of showing us how He forgives us.

So this is the choice, either the Blood of Christ is able to clean me, or Purgatory cleans me. With the blood of Christ, it is our repentance, and faith in Him that activates the healing power of His Love. I feel as if with purgatory i can do good deeds, and not ask for forgiveness, and go to purgatory, make sure i made alot of friends who can pray for me while im dead, and get out of purgatory, and go to paradise without ever going directly to God and repenting. But there is no way to escape God.

I am sure no one ever does such a blasphemous thing. But notice how you have to come up with yet another doctrine to make sure no one would think to do such a thing. Even so, We go to God whether we believe in purgatory or we don't. But Belief in purgatory is like saying "Lord, i know your blood saves me, but i'll trust in purgatory just in case. You'll never know if your blood can really save me of any due punishment." Belief in purgatory compromises your faith in the saving Blood of the Lamb. When you sin, just go to God and repent.

This is why i don't believe in it. So i speak for myself.

I don't mean to go to God and whine about what you know you did was wrong, and complain about how weak you are and how you will never change. Where is your faith? Repent means "Recognize what you did, and change your ways." It does not mean to "recognize what you did and suffer in guilt as a self-punishment"!(Penance?) Go, pray to God about the mess, and go and fix that tension between you and your brother or sister. Go, pray to God about your laziness, and go and be a responsible person. And Go in peace, your faith has healed you.

Do you have any sins that you know you are doing and haven't asked God for forgiveness yet? I am not saying to cry about it, or to make excuses for your sins, i mean to humble yourselves before the presence of the Lord, let the Spirit of God break you down, remold you and reshape you.. putting to death the old self.. Getting back up with a new strength, new faith, and ressurecting as a new person. Changing your ways and living with a Christlike mind. Because in this Life when God destroys you it means He puts to death the old you, in order to renew your spirit. And He will continue to do this as long as you walk in faith and repentive.

This is the Fire testing our faith.. God is a Living God who works with the Living.
This is why we go to God and ask for forgiveness and as you are heading towards change, God is providing you with the strength to change. If you use that strength to change, and you never thank God, then you changed yourself (or you assume it was on your own), this change is only temporary, and maybe the reason why you still fell into the same old sins. But when you use that strength in recognition that God is the one changing you, that all strength you have came from the Lord and therefore you thank Him for this change, then that change is more everlasting, because you would not want to go back to the old, knowing that God is making things better.

And if you fall, then keep trying and trying. Because Jesus said "Forgive your brother even seven times seven times." He was saying here what HE does with us who keep falling, He will keep forgiving until we finally get it and overcome that sin that makes us fall.

Are there any questions?
 
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Flynmonkie

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Absent from the body present with the lord. When we die and we are in spirit form, we will be in heaven with God. I am however still studying the Revelation ...But right now that is the only thing that makes sense to me. And your not debating your deliberating

Scripture simply does not give much information about the intermediate state. But what we do know from Scripture is enough to debunk wrong theories.



Ok please do not beat me for this post....and do not take it personal against me but here is the best description I have found (ducking my head over here) But I am giving this to you for your own reproof. (remember I like you and you like me OKAY?)
SOUL SLEEP. One view held by many is that the soul of a believer who dies remains unconscious until the resurrection. This view is found in some of the non-canonical writings of the early church. Its best-known advocates today are the Seventh-Day Adventists. They point out that the word “sleep” is often used in Scripture as a synonym for death. For example, Jesus told the disciples, “Our friend Lazarus sleepeth; but I go, that I may awake him out of sleep” (John 11:11). And Paul described the dead in Christ as “them also which sleep in Jesus” (1 Thess. 4:14).

But the “sleep” referred to in such imagery has to do with the body, not the soul. In his account of the crucifixion, Matthew wrote of a great earthquake: “And the graves were opened; and many bodies of the saints which slept arose” (Matt. 27:52). It is the body, not the soul, that “sleeps” in death. The body lies in rest utterly devoid of any sensation or awareness, awaiting reconstitution and resurrection in eternal perfection to join the soul already in heaven, since death. But the soul enters the very presence of the Lord. This was affirmed again and again by the apostle Paul in the verses I cited above, as he described his desire to be absent from the body, so that he could be “present with the Lord” (2 Cor. 5:8; Phil. 1:23).

The souls of the departed enter into their rest. But it is a rest from labor and strife, not a rest of unconsciousness. The apostle John was told to write, “Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord from henceforth: Yea, saith the Spirit, that they may rest from their labours” (Rev. 14:13). Yet he is clearly not describing a “rest” of unconscious sleep; in the scene John witnessed in heaven, the souls of the redeemed were there, actively singing and praising God (vv. 1–4).

Everything Scripture says about the death of believers indicates that they are immediately ushered consciously into the Lord’s presence. In the words of the Westminster Confession of Faith, “The bodies of men after death return to dust, and see corruption; but their souls, (which neither die nor sleep,) having an immortal subsistence, immediately return to God who gave them. The souls of the righteous, being then made perfect in holiness, are received into the highest heavens, where they behold the face of God in light and glory, waiting for the full redemption of their bodies” (32.1).

PURGATORY. The Roman Catholic doctrine of purgatory is nowhere taught in Scripture. It was devised to accommodate Catholicism’s denial of justification by faith alone. Here’s why:

Scripture very clearly teaches that an absolutely perfect righteousness is necessary for entry into heaven. Jesus said, “I say unto you, that except your righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees, ye shall in no case enter into the kingdom of heaven” (Matt. 5:20). He then added, “Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which is in heaven is perfect” (v. 48)—thus setting the standard as high as it can possibly be set.

Later in His ministry, when the rich young ruler approached Jesus asking how he might enter heaven, Jesus upheld this same standard of absolute perfection. He began by declaring that “there is none good but one, that is, God” (Matt. 19:17)—not disclaiming sinless perfection for Himself, but plainly pointing out that such perfection is impossible for sinful humanity. Then, however, Jesus told the young man that in order to obtain eternal life, he must have a track record of perfect obedience to the law (vv. 17–21). Again and again, He made the required standard of righteousness impossibly high for all who would seek to earn God’s favor on their own.

The young ruler clearly did not understand or acknowledge his own sinfulness. He assured Jesus that he had indeed kept the law from his youth up (v. 20).

Jesus subtly pointed out the young man’s covetousness, which was a violation of the Tenth Commandment. From the outset of His conversation with the young man, the Lord was prodding him to confess that no one but God Himself is truly good. But the rich young ruler was unwilling to face his own sin, and so he finally went away without salvation.

The disciples marveled at this. The young man was evidently—from the human perspective—one of the most righteous individuals they knew. Notice that no one disputed his claim that he had obeyed the law. There must have been no overt sins in his life that anyone could point to. He was the best of men. So the disciples were floored when he walked away with no assurance of eternal life from Jesus. In fact, Jesus told them, “Verily I say unto you, That a rich man shall hardly enter into the kingdom of heaven” (v. 23).

Again, He was setting the standard at an impossible height. He was saying that the most fastidious legal observance is not enough. The most flawless external righteousness is not enough. All the worldly advantages of wealth are of no help. Only absolute perfection is acceptable to God. Our Lord kept underscoring these things because he wanted people to see the utter futility of seeking to earn righteousness by any system of works.

The disciples got the message. They asked, “Who then can be saved?” (v. 25).
And Jesus replied, “With men this is impossible; but with God all things are possible” (v. 26).

We know from Paul’s treatise on justification in Romans 4 that God saves believers by imputing to them the merit of Christ’s perfect righteousness—not in any sense because of their own righteousness. God accepts believers in Christ. He clothes them with the perfect righteousness of Christ. He declares them perfectly righteous because of Christ. Their sins have been imputed to Christ, who has paid the full penalty. His righteousness is now imputed to them, and they receive the full merit for it. That is what justification by faith means.
 
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Lotar

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For those interested.


 
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ps139

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Some pretty interesting responses so far, I appreciate them. The Catholic conception of purgatory is a final purification that must take place before we enter heaven. That is all that is officially taught. As for time period, whether its even a "place" or not, we leave that to speculation.
I found part of the CS Lewis quote:
 
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