dollarsbill
Well-Known Member
God knows. He is omniscient. We aren't.But they deserve so much worse, don't they?
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God knows. He is omniscient. We aren't.But they deserve so much worse, don't they?
If you don't already know that mass murder is wrong I'm not going to try to convince you.You just said sinful human beings can't judge properly, so how do you know it's wrong?
If you don't already know that mass murder is wrong I'm not going to try to convince you.
This thread is about 'eternal Hell'. Only God has the 'ability' to judge who goes to Hell and who doesn't.It was you that said sinful humans don't have the ability to judge, not me.
Your one liners almost always contradict each other.
This thread is about 'eternal Hell'. Only God has the 'ability' to judge who goes to Hell and who doesn't.
I don't know why God created the 'eternal hell', but I know the NT says He did. And what He does is righteous and sovereign.I believe this thread is about why an eternal hell. If you don't know, just say so. No harm in that.
dollarsbill said:And what He does is righteous and sovereign.
Which also means that if something is not righteous, God doesn't do it.seeingeyes said:It certainly is. Amen.
Which also means that if something is not righteous, God doesn't do it.
A lot of things that God did in the Bible would be considered unrighteous to many people. I.E the Flood.
I was just using that as an example. I could have used other examples. I.E. burning Sodom alive, the curse of Dt 28, etc.Who said that the flood was unrighteous? Did I miss that post?
I was just using that as an example. I could have used other examples. I.E. burning Sodom alive, the curse of Dt 28, etc.
Your theft was from another finite being, making it a finite punishment. God is infinite so the punishment for transgressions against Him are infinite. When Jesus died, He took those sins to the grave. He is infinite as well. He always was. He became flesh so that he could pay for those sins. Hell is only for those who reject that sacrifice.
May God Richly Bless you!
God made it plain how He feels about wickedness. Satan will indeed burn forever in torment.The flood and the fireworks at Sodom both had an end, though. They ended in death. A punishment that ends in death in not the same as a punishment that never ends with death.
Not those who perished. Again God made it clear how He views rebellion against Him. The curse of Dt 28 is about as horrible as anything I know of.Deut 28 is an interesting point, because we see how that plays out later in the prophets. The Israelites did indeed disobey God and they did indeed receive the curse of Deut 28, but they were always promised restoration at the end of their trials.
God made it plain how He feels about wickedness. Satan will indeed burn forever in torment.
Not those who perished. Again God made it clear how He views rebellion against Him. The curse of Dt 28 is about as horrible as anything I know of.
A lot of things that God did in the Bible would be considered unrighteous to many people. I.E the Flood.
I don't exactly see it spelled out, especially not in the OT.
It's really strange to have the fate of most of creation simply kept a secret until some very few verses in the NT having to be interpreted in a certain way together to conclude, finally, that the everlasting fate for most of His creation is for Him to torment them forever.
If that grace comes by hearing the gospel and then make a decision regarding it, there are so many who never get to hear it, even in the first world.
But again, if the punishment for sin was eternal suffering, then Jesus did not in fact pay that price. The (our) punishment was laid on Him, as the bible says. Not that a completely different punishment was laid on Him.
Apparently life and death does mean different things in the bible, which in any case when we read it in english, doesn't convey the full and true meaning of things. Remember that the bible itself is written in more than one language. But that doesn't mean it's necessarily complicated. Eternal life, for example, probably does mean eternal life.
Everybody who says God will torment anybody forever is in effect saying He will judge unrighteously.
What is your take on Rev 14:10?
It's not exactly spelled out across the NT (much less the OT) that the fate of most of us is eternal torment. There's a much stronger case for everybody being saved eventually (I'm not arguing that, just pointing out that there are MANY verses that seem to say that plainly). Again, why would God be so incredibly vague and slow to warn people against the worst fate imaginable?I don't know why God created the 'eternal hell', but I know the NT says He did. And what He does is righteous and sovereign.
True, but there are many other passages that can be taken to explain or modify those things. For instance the resurrection and righteous judgment of all, including those who drowned in the flood. There's the belief, or hope at least, that God will ultimately judge us all righteously, and maybe even mercifully.A lot of things that God did in the Bible would be considered unrighteous to many people. I.E the Flood.