Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.
Infants and children live ungodly? So you don't have a problem with God killing men, women, children, infants, old and young with fire, which must have been agonizing. Your only objection is if it lasts a long time.
Jonah was cast into the sea and prayed from hell.
Days later, his soul was put back in his body as a
result of that prayer.
Then Jonah prays again - speaking about his first prayer
when he was in hell -dead.
He tells how God had heard him.
Jonah is not right then asking God to hear him from hell.
Hmmm.... interesting. I never thought of the story of Lazarus and the Rich-man in that way before. I do wish that this is true. But I always thought that this real and literal story (in regards to the after-life) that took place during the time of Moses and the prophets because Abraham tells the rich-man that that the rich-man's brothers have Moses and the prophets and that they are to hear them (versus hearing one who has rose from the dead). Abraham did not appear to treat his brothers as being dead and gone (or that they were among him in hell and or in Abraham's bosom). But I would like to hear your explanation on this (because it would help to reconcile the Scriptures in such a way that I never considered before).
Please take note that if what you say is true, and the dead do sleep until the resurrection, we have to address the fact that Jesus spoke to the spirits in prison while he was in the heart of the Earth (i.e. Sheol or the realm of the dead) for three days and three nights, too. Who are these spirits that Jesus preached to? Were they demons or they departed souls? If they are departed souls, then Jesus would have had to wake them up out of their slumber to preach to them.
God -is not the God of the dead, but of the living.
I am - the God of Abraham
False information. The preposition in Luke 16:24 is "ἐν/en" which means "in" not "ἀπὸ/apo" which means "from.". . . In the original text of the 24th verse there is nothing to indicate whether the preposition should be “in” (this fire) or “from” it. The rich man is awaiting his punishment, at the edge of the flame but not yet in it. He is parched, not burning; a single drop of water is an extremely humble request for someone allegedly being consumed by fire. It is enough to moisten a man’s tongue but not enough to cool his burning flesh....
Malachi 4:1 is about a day that will come and those that are
proud and do wickedly, shall be stubble..."
This is about people that still lived and never died. They
are still doing wickedly upon the earth.
Hell is the grave (sheol). According to the Bible, we all go to the grave when we die (Psalms 90:3, Psalms 104:29, Job 34:15). While we are dead, we are completely unconscious (Ecclesiastes 9:5). . . . Everlasting torment is not Biblical, it is purely a Church doctrine. The only way everlasting torment is possible is that the condemned will receive everlasting life in order to burn eternally, but the Bible makes it clear that everlasting life is not reserved for the wicked. God is not going to create new bodies that last forever for those who lived in sin. That is preposterous. . . .
Malachi 4:1 is about what happens to people in this world on one day. They will be like stubble.But won't the righteous be stubble according to your interpretation too? That kind of undermines the whole passage of you ask me. For the point is about the wicked being stubble (not the righteous).
...
Why does it matter when the story took place?
MountainPine said:Moses and the prophets still stand to this day (Matthew 5:17-19).
...as the Bible records that only Enoch, Elijah, and Jesus were the only ones who never saw corruption.
MountainPine said:This is obviously a future event due to the fact that Abraham is conscious,
MountainPine said:You must be referring to 1 Peter 3:18-21. "Prison" refers to Tartarus, where the nefilim are being held for the day of judgment. he was preaching to them.
False information. The preposition in Luke 16:24 is "ἐν/en" which means "in" not "ἀπὸ/apo" which means "from."
Luke 16:24 καὶ αὐτὸς φωνήσας εἶπεν, Πάτερ Ἀβραάμ, ἐλέησόν με καὶ πέμψον Λάζαρον ἵνα βάψῃ τὸ ἄκρον τοῦ δακτύλου αὐτοῦ ὕδατος καὶ καταψύξῃ τὴν γλῶσσάν μου, ὅτι ὀδυνῶμαι ἐν τῇ φλογὶ ταύτῃ. "Apo" occurs in vs. 21 in the phrase "ἀπὸ/from the rich man's table." There is no manuscript evidence for any variations or other readings of Lk 16:24.
Those in the flesh at the time of the new earth -will do this.
Go forth and look at the carcases of the wicked.
their worm dieth not
See the last verse of Isaiah chapter 66.
Ashes and carcases are not the same thing. Some verses in
the Bible even use both words in them.
The holy people looking at these ones that disobeyed God will be abhorred.
This is the same word as "contempt" that Daniel 12 applies to the ones that rise to shame - and everlasting
contempt.
You've missed the point. Where in the bible does it say that God is going to give the wicked new bodies that will last forever in order to burn forever?