Nope... people still like to make up their own rules and disregard what God has to say.
Oh indeed....
Nope... people still like to make up their own rules and disregard what God has to say.
red...
In the Lake there is no hope. Those who are lost to it have no hope. Those who are alive now and headed for it are right now condemend already without hope. Only Christ offers hope.
It sounds to me like you're saying that God's unmerited favor wasn't given to you until you merited it through humbling yourself.Grace was not given to me until this coward was on the floor in humble repentance.
But not against your will. God wnats us to come to Him because we want to, because we want to be with Him, not because He changed our hearts. To be sure, God works i our hearts to convict us of our need for Him, but He allows us to say no. God shows us the gate and the key. We each have a big God shapped hole in our heart put there by the fall. So we can respond to God's calling.
Have you followed any of the recent discussion between Logos and I? I asked him for some passages that plainly spell out that you have a chance to accept Jesus after you die. I gave him examples of the types of verses he should look for. Did you notice his response? He didn't even try. He posted a couple of verses that were taken completely out of context. When pressed again, he walked away from the debate. Why? Because the passages that would support universal salvation do not exist. You try. Can you find a single verse where Jesus, or an apsotle, says plainly and clearly that you can accept Jesus while in the lake of fire? Can you show me a single verse where Jesus or an apostle says the anybody gets out of the lake of fire?
If you cannot find the passages to support your doctrine, do you think it might be time to honestly examine what you believe and why you believe it?
These are baseless platitudes perpetrated by TnetMaker.org and others. Nothing you have said has any support in scripture. YOU asserst that the lake of fire is a cleansing fire. YOU have provided no scriptural basis for that asertion. Why?The lake of fire itself supports the doctrine. The lake of fire is the purgative, cleansing,
purifying after life event. This is where the chaff is burned off, so the wheat may exist
unencumbered. And no one emerges, because they pass through the fire in entering
the kingdom. The flaming sword which seperates creation from paradise the same fire that
purges.
Immanent God, which is Christ, casts evildoers into the flaming sword from creation, so
that they may be received by God into paradise, on the other side.
The annihilistic view is that in the event that there is no good wheat left whatsoever, and
all that's left is rotten, corrupted, tortured, self hating, God hating sin, then the entire
being is consumed in the fire, and suffering is ended.
But if there is a remnant of good, it is preserved, healed, and flourishes, and God is glorified.
Amen.
I didn't say that. I said one reason I left Christianity was because the only message I consistently heard, which appeared to me at the time to be backed up by scripture, was that eternal torment was indeed inevitable. And I did not believe the One, the Supreme Lord, would ever do that.
I have read the whole Bible. I am sure Dave, Logos, and Redfin have too.
We're all unique. Your own reading of the Bible is equally influenced by your own predispositions.
You do not occupy an interpretation-free zone, nor is your understanding of the Bible unhindered by the your own particular limitations in understanding and perspective.
Except its not just 2 or 3 verses as has been patently obvious throughout this entire thread, ...
which is why the doctrine of ET offers no hope,
dress it up as mich as you like Nin it is a message of ultimate doom and gloom for most of God's own creation, why must you insist on placing limits on God's power to restore?
It sounds to me like you're saying that God's unmerited favor wasn't given to you until you merited it through humbling yourself.
I reject the thought that we humble ourselves. I believe God humbles us.
That's sort of true. I decided the Bible was a human-produced document, like all documents. Containing some truths, yes, but not infallible. I recognize that this sets me apart from Dave, Logos, and Redfin, who see the Bible as an authoritative voice in a way that I don't.In other words you decided not to serve the God of the Bible. Because not everyone wanted to, wasn't that it?
I don't equate "listening to God" to "reading the Bible." I believe truths can be perceived through deep reflection on the Bible, but as I said, it no longer holds a privileged or exclusive place for me as a "window" on truth.Nineveh said:Back in my pew warmer days I said much the same thing. ...until I decided to listen to what God had to say.
Do you think that your preferences and your conditioning no longer influence your reading of the Bible?Nineveh said:They used to be. Then I traded my will for His.
I agree that one needs open lines of communication, I just don't agree on what constitutes the best "phone."That is why prayer goes hand in hand with reading the Bible. If one wants to understand what God has to say, one needs to open the lines of communication.
Sadly, you haven't even been able to quote one verse, at least one verse in context.Except its not just 2 or 3 verses as has been patently obvious throughout this entire thread, in any case you've had extreme difficulty in just addressing the one, any answers on Jesus's answer to the disciples yet?
Have you seen any of the run-up to the Olympics in Beijing? Here is a story about the bad translations from Chinese to English. To be sure, the translations are very accurate in a word-for-word sense, but the meaning is lost. For instance, mouth watering chicken is translated as siliva chicken. Needless to say, it has not done well with english speaking patrons.red77 said:Obscure versions? Oh please, they're the most faithful to the original texts, the KJV isnt even regarded as particularly accurate from non universalists so enough with that strawman, and its patently obvious to anyone who isnt trying to score cheap points that Logos has offered a darn sight more than what you give him credit for....
Grace was not given to me until this coward was on the floor in humble repentance.
Word-for-word translations of the Bible face a similar problem. The words may be accuratly translated, but the meaning is lost or changed. Sometimes there is no word for word translation available. Not all words translate. Being faithful to the original texts requires more than just translating a word. The context within which that word is used must also be accuratly translated to make sure the meaning of the words is preserved.
These are baseless platitudes perpetrated by TnetMaker.org and others. Nothing you have said has any support in scripture. YOU asserst that the lake of fire is a cleansing fire. YOU have provided no scriptural basis for that asertion. Why?
That's sort of true. I decided the Bible was a human-produced document, like all documents. Containing some truths, yes, but not infallible. I recognize that this sets me apart from Dave, Logos, and Redfin, who see the Bible as an authoritative voice in a way that I don't.
I don't equate "listening to God" to "reading the Bible." I believe truths can be perceived through deep reflection on the Bible, but as I said, it no longer holds a privileged or exclusive place for me as a "window" on truth.
Do you think that your preferences and your conditioning no longer influence your reading of the Bible?
I agree that one needs open lines of communication, I just don't agree on what constitutes the best "phone."
In my view, the notion of "hell" (as a realm of punishment and torment) is a common human idea with a long history, typically emerging in cultures at similar overall stages of development. It is a "product" of a certain type of psychology, not an absolute truth.
Me, too.
But you missed my point.
Who wouldn't respond to that kind of message...that is if they really thought it was possible? You might know nothing of what it is to be a Christian, or the first thing about the grace of God...yet when the "fire and brimstone" type of message is delivered you might respond to that message to escape the punishment described...not because you understand why.
Logos helped me come to these particular interpretations, based on alot of good
scriptural evidence he produced connecting God's Presence and fire with
purgation and cleansing. I understand he gets alot of his material from
tentmaker, good for him. I'm all the richer for his efforts.
And again you avoid the issue. Why don't you just post the passages that clearly quote Jesus or the Apsotles saying either you can accept Christ after you die or the lake of fire is not forever?Logos helped me come to these particular interpretations, based on alot of good
scriptural evidence he produced connecting God's Presence and fire with
purgation and cleansing. I understand he gets alot of his material from
tentmaker, good for him. I'm all the richer for his efforts.
No, I was a Christian, Nineveh. And I regarded the Bible as authoritative at one time. But when I started to reflect on the doctrine of eternal torment, instead of just sort of uncritically accepting it as true (just because that's what the Christians I knew believed and what the Bible appeared to teach), I began to doubt that it could be true. It was evil in its extremity and mercilessness, and the God I believed in was moral and good.Nineveh said:Barring Logos, it's not that much different, really. At least you aren't trying to change or ignore what God is saying, you just outright reject it on the grounds you don't believe He really said or meant it. While dave and his buddy want to exchange what God has said for their own personal flavah.
From your witness you said you had believed in Christ. Balder, you are starting to confuse me here. Were you really ever a Christian or were you just saying you were back when it suited your argument?
When you decided to read "what God says," were you reading an English translation, or the original language? Are you sure that interpretation is not really "involved" in what you get out of the Bible now?Nineveh said:I didn't think so as a pew warmer. Then one day I decided to put all the garbage men had told me about it aside and read it for myself. After that it became much more easy to compare what men say to what God says.
How did you "find" God was telling the truth about something like that? Do you mean you believed it?Nineveh said:Not everyone does. Some chose to sacrifice their kids. Some like ouija boards. Some prefer to gaze at tea leaves. Others choose to naval gaze. It all depends on what you are seeking and who you are willing to ask. I was seeking the Truth. I found God was telling the Truth when He said, "I love those who love me, And those who seek me diligently will find me."
Correct... until God "kisses" them. Then He brings them to life and they believe.Jesus proves God loved the world, yet those who do not believe are condemned already.