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Uber Member
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Dec 17, 2018, 12:36 PM
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That's what the Bible tells us. Do I believe it? Yes.
So can we also assume you believe that those who do not believe in Christ are condemned? John 3:18.
Not trying to be a smart aleck, but just trying to see if we can establish the Bible as our source of truth as opposed to cultural beliefs.
As to your question of free will, as I'm sure you are aware it can be a thorn patch. My conviction is that unless we humans have the option of saying "no" to God, then we really don't have a true option of saying "yes". And the ability to choose is key to love, rather like a man asking for a woman's hand in marriage. If she is being forced to say yes, then her "yes" doesn't really mean anything.
And, of course, the other side of the coin bears the sovereignty of God.
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Jobs & Parenting Expert
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Dec 17, 2018, 01:10 PM
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Originally Posted by jlisenbe
So can we also assume you believe that those who do not believe in Christ are condemned? John 3:18.
But what does the Bible mean by "condemned"?
Not trying to be a smart aleck, but just trying to see if we can establish the Bible as our source of truth as opposed to cultural beliefs.
The writers were caught in their culture and time period. They had never heard of women as CEOs, public schools, cremation, or strawberry shortcake.
As to your question of free will, as I'm sure you are aware it can be a thorn patch. My conviction is that unless we humans have the option of saying "no" to God, then we really don't have a true option of saying "yes". And the ability to choose is key to love, rather like a man asking for a woman's hand in marriage. If she is being forced to say yes, then her "yes" doesn't really mean anything.
So your take on heaven is that we will still have free will. And it will all start all over again. (Hopefully, then, I will remember the bad choices I made the first time around, and make good ones instead.)
And, of course, the other side of the coin bears the sovereignty of God.
I have no idea what you mean.
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Uber Member
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Dec 17, 2018, 01:55 PM
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The writers were caught in their culture and time period. They had never heard of women as CEOs, public schools, cremation, or strawberry shortcake.a
At some point you have to make up your mind. Either the Bible trumps the culture, or the other way around. Besides, I don't think your premise is entirely correct. Lydia had her own business and the church met in her house. Priscilla seemed to be preferred in her ministry role over her husband. The description of the "ideal woman/wife" in Proverbs 31 was given to the writer by his mother and describes a woman active in several businesses.
My comment about the sovereignty of God was meant to point out the other side of the free will/sovereignty of God debate.
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Jobs & Parenting Expert
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Dec 17, 2018, 02:59 PM
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Originally Posted by jlisenbe
At some point you have to make up your mind. Either the Bible trumps the culture, or the other way around.
"For the prophecy came not in old time by the will of man: but holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost.” 2 Peter 1: 21.
Those holy men encased God's truths in what they knew - desert terrain, camels, tents, kings, sheep, warfare with bows and arrows, water obtained from a well or from an unpolluted stream. Jesus cut to the chase by crossing over cultural boundaries and time periods when He said, "Love God and each other."
Besides, I don't think your premise is entirely correct. Lydia had her own business and the church met in her house. Priscilla seemed to be preferred in her ministry role over her husband. The description of the "ideal woman/wife" in Proverbs 31 was given to the writer by his mother and describes a woman active in several businesses.
The huge majority of women stayed home. Housework and cooking were major parts of a woman's day; childcare filled in the rest. There were no modern conveniences (kitchen appliances, indoor plumbing, Wal-Mart, Hyundai Elantras) to lighten her workload. Plus, Jewish and Roman societies were patriarchies that didn't welcome women in male positions, so I'm sure those women you mention didn't have an easy time doing what they did.
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Uber Member
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Dec 18, 2018, 06:24 AM
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Those holy men encased God's truths in what they knew - desert terrain, camels, tents, kings, sheep, warfare with bows and arrows, water obtained from a well or from an unpolluted stream. Jesus cut to the chase by crossing over cultural boundaries and time periods when He said, "Love God and each other."
1. What you say is certainly true, but the great danger is when people use that to inject their own views into scripture. In marriage, the wife is to submit to her husband and the husband is to love his wife as Christ loved the church. Now people will say, "That is old fashioned and reflects the culture of the day." So they invalidate the Word of God and replace its teachings with their own ideas.
2. There is an enormous difference in saying that the Bible reflected the world in which the authors lived (camels, sheep, etc.) versus saying the Bible reflected the VALUES of that world culture. We must never forget how counter-cultural the New Testament was. The Gospel was preached in a day of multiple gods, sexual carelessness, marital infidelity, widespread prostitution, neglect of the poor, and a view of humanity that was only slightly above animals. The Gospel directly confronted all of that. Jesus was crucified in large part because He confronted a wicked culture.
I'm sure those women you mention didn't have an easy time doing what they did.
90% of people lived in poverty or slavery. Life was extremely difficult for men and women both.
What does the Bible mean by "condemned"? "to pronounce to be guilty; sentence to punishment"
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Jobs & Parenting Expert
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Dec 18, 2018, 11:31 AM
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1. What you say is certainly true, but the great danger is when people use that to inject their own views into scripture. In marriage, the wife is to submit to her husband and the husband is to love his wife as Christ loved the church. Now people will say, "That is old fashioned and reflects the culture of the day." So they invalidate the Word of God and replace its teachings with their own ideas.
Wives must still submit to their husbands? (This means what?) And we aren't to wear "clothing woven of two kinds of material"?
The Gospel was preached in a day of multiple gods, sexual carelessness, marital infidelity, widespread prostitution, neglect of the poor, and a view of humanity that was only slightly above animals. The Gospel directly confronted all of that. Jesus was crucified in large part because He confronted a wicked culture.
And how is 2018 any different?
Perish = die temporally or eternally
Judged = pronounced to be either innocent or guilty
Condemned = sentenced to punishment
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Uber Member
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Dec 18, 2018, 12:12 PM
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Wives must still submit to their husbands? (This means what?) And we aren't to wear "clothing woven of two kinds of material"?
You see what I mean? You don't think that aligns with our culture now, so of course your cultural belief overrides scripture very clearly laid out in a number of places, Ephesians 5 being the most complete. Might add that husbands no longer need to love their wives as Christ loved the church if your reasoning is correct.
I could pull up the same issue with fidelity in marriage. That was in effect during Paul's day, but we modernists know better now. We have birth control, so there is no real reason to remain faithful to your spouse.
And the list goes on forever. It has the appearance of making yourself out to be your own Bible, and you appeal to an obscure scriptural reference that was in place only for the nation of Israel.
Perish = die temporally or eternally
Judged = pronounced to be either innocent or guilty
Condemned = sentenced to punishment
So what is your conclusion? What is the outcome for unbelievers?
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Jobs & Parenting Expert
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Dec 18, 2018, 12:20 PM
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I didn't make a statement; I asked you a question:
Wives must still submit to their husbands? (This means what?)
What's your definition of "submit"?
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Uber Member
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Dec 18, 2018, 12:28 PM
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If you accept the Bible as our authority and source of truth, then why ask the question? Should we still be faithful to our spouse? Should we still tell the truth? Seems silly to me.
"Submit" would mean to respect, honor, and obey.
I note you did not ask what "love as Christ loved the church" means.
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Jobs & Parenting Expert
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Dec 18, 2018, 12:33 PM
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Originally Posted by jlisenbe
If you accept the Bible as our authority and source of truth, then why ask the question? Should we still be faithful to our spouse? Should we still tell the truth? Seems silly to me.
"Submit" would mean to respect, honor, and obey.
Hmmmm, that's not what a lot of Christian fundamentalists think it means.
I note you did not ask what "love as Christ loved the church" means.
Easy-peasy. Love even to death.
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Uber Member
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Dec 18, 2018, 12:38 PM
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Wow. You are quick today!
Hmmmm, that's not what a lot of Christian fundamentalists think it means.
You asked what I believe.
What is your idea about the fate of unbelievers?
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Jobs & Parenting Expert
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Dec 18, 2018, 12:53 PM
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What is your idea about the fate of unbelievers?
I was taught and believed for years that unbelievers (non-Christians, in particular the non-Missouri-Synod Lutheran flavor) will suffer eternal torment in hell. I've worked with and been friends with many Jews, Muslims, Hindus, atheists, agnostics, et al. who live more God-pleasing lives than some Christians I've worked with and been friends with. So now, as someone who will face her Maker before long, I am giving a lot of thought to death and what happens afterwards. I wish Lazarus would have filled us in with a few details.
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Uber Member
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Dec 19, 2018, 06:05 AM
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many Jews, Muslims, Hindus, atheists, agnostics, et al. who live more God-pleasing lives than some Christians I've worked with and been friends with. So now, as someone who will face her Maker before long, I am giving a lot of thought to death and what happens afterwards. I wish Lazarus would have filled us in with a few details.
They have no faith in Christ, but they live "God-pleasing lives"? Consider this.
In Romans 3, Paul quotes several OT passages to point out that no one is "good". No one leads anything even approaching a God-pleasing life. We are all guilty. Now if we compare ourselves with ourselves, then some look better than others, but when we compare ourselves to God's standard, then we all come up pitifully short, and are all guilty. I am guilty. You are guilty. Your friends are all guilty.
We should also bear in mind that our first responsibility is to believe what God says. Above all else, that is our first job. "And this is his commandment, that we believe in the name of his Son Jesus Christ and love one another, just as he has commanded us.". Before we do anything else, we must do as God says and believe in His Son. So if a person does some good things but does not believe in Jesus, that person is not living a life pleasing to God. We cannot gain God's favor on the basis of our good works.
If you and I are swept several miles out to sea in a rip tide, we both need a lifeguard to rescue us. If you say that your hair looks nicer than mine, or I believe I can stay afloat five minutes longer than you, none of that matters. If we refuse the services of the lifeguard, we perish. If we cling to the lifeguard, we are saved. If the lifeguard rescues you first, I would hope you would yell to me, "Trust in the lifeguard! He is your only hope."
in particular the non-Missouri-Synod Lutheran flavor
That was funny!
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Ultra Member
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Dec 25, 2018, 04:39 PM
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Originally Posted by dwashbur
I will put Holton's quotes in bold italics and follow them with my own comments.
Whether it is vivid descriptions of Dante's Inferno or revivalist "hellfire and brimstone" sermons, the impression is too often given that we must go beyond biblical description to alert people to avoid such a dreadful place.
Agreed.
Hell is not horrible because of alleged implements of torture or its temperature. (After all, it is described variously in Scripture as "outer darkness" and a "lake of fire.")
Supports my position that "eternal punishment in hell for unbelievers" is not Biblical.
When our conscience condemns us, "We carry always a hell within us" (Gen. Epp. 167).
Similar to my contention that the false proposition originates within the believer himself, and reflects being on the social margins.
We are not entitled, much less required, in our present condition to defend the doctrine of eternal punishment in any way that either exceeds Scripture or reflects a perverse delight in damnation.
Perfectly stated, and my position in a nutshell.
Sorry for such a long response time - Christmas and all that.
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Ultra Member
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Jan 20, 2019, 04:01 PM
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Hi Athos,
I see all those descriptions - fire, darkness, chains, weeping, etc. as attempts to describe the indescribable.
And considering that Dante's Inferno was a blatantly political piece, I'm not sure how much theology we should try to get out of it.
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Ultra Member
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Jan 23, 2019, 08:27 PM
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After more than a month and nearly 700 views, there have been no answers to the original question. The conclusion is that the proposition that unbelievers are condemned to hell for eternal punishment is not Biblical.
It is hoped that this false pernicious philosophy will someday no longer be promoted by anyone.
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Uber Member
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Jan 24, 2019, 04:15 AM
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Answers, yes. Answers that you are prepared to accept? No. Revelation 20 has the answer as does John 3:16. "Perish" has to mean to endure punishment unless a person believes, as you seem to do, that it means to simply cease to exist, which has no support in the Bible. "It is appointed unto man once to die, and then the judgement."
But we must consider this. A person can be wrong about the day of judgement (and I could be that person), and yet still be alright so long as he/she is right on the subject of faith in Christ as the source of salvation. I'm sure we will all "sit around" in heaven some day discussing how we had it wrong on this or that, but no one will discuss how they had it wrong about the necessity of faith in Jesus.
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Ultra Member
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Feb 28, 2019, 03:00 AM
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Originally Posted by jlisenbe
Answers, yes. Answers that you are prepared to accept? No. Revelation 20 has the answer as does John 3:16. "Perish" has to mean to endure punishment unless a person believes, as you seem to do, that it means to simply cease to exist, which has no support in the Bible. "It is appointed unto man once to die, and then the judgement."
But we must consider this. A person can be wrong about the day of judgement (and I could be that person), and yet still be alright so long as he/she is right on the subject of faith in Christ as the source of salvation. I'm sure we will all "sit around" in heaven some day discussing how we had it wrong on this or that, but no one will discuss how they had it wrong about the necessity of faith in Jesus.
Revelation 20 and John 3:16 are not concerned with the question starting this thread. Please read the question.
As to "perish" - there is error here, also. I won't post any links since I'm informed you don't read them, but here is a quote from one of those links - " As to any secondary meanings of perish, NONE even remotely express the theory of endless torment." Dr. Weymouth. Try Googling.
As to your "no support in the Bible", error #3. The word "perish" is found in the Bible many times where it means " die, kill, destroyed, consumed, slain, being eat up, laid waste, go to nothing, be as nothing, vanish, withereth, cut off, turn again unto dust, deceased, fade away and utterly wasted". Never your meaning of eternal punishment. Please don't quote the Bible with untruths. Googling can take you to many excellent Bible websites.
Your second paragraph posits a new question. Would you like to discuss that one, too?
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Uber Member
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Feb 28, 2019, 05:17 AM
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If you would simply continue to read the John passage, Jesus elaborates on John 3:16 by saying, "He who believes in Him is not condemned. But he who does not believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God." Now the word "condemned" has the meaning of incurring judgement, and it very plainly refers to those who are unbelievers.
The Amplified version renders the passage in this manner. "18 He who believes in Him [who clings to, trusts in, relies on Him] is not judged [he who trusts in Him never comes up for judgment; for him there is no rejection, no condemnation—he incurs no damnation]; but he who does not believe (cleave to, rely on, trust in Him) is judged already [he has already been convicted and has already received his sentence] because he has not believed in and trusted in the name of the only begotten Son of God. [He is condemned for refusing to let his trust rest in Christ’s name.]19 The [basis of the] judgment (indictment, the test by which men are judged, the ground for the sentence) lies in this: the Light has come into the world, and people have loved the darkness rather than and more than the Light, for their works (deeds) were evil."
You never have told us what you believe the outcome for unbelievers will be. What do you think "perish" refers to?
BTW, your original question was, "Can anyone provide a quote from the Bible where it is stated that unbelievers are condemned to hell for eternal punishment?". John 3:16 and Rev. 20 are both quite concerned with that question. In fact. Revelation 20 directly addresses it.
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