Should unbelievers be punished? Why?
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Should unbelievers be punished? Why?
Post #1Why should unbelievers be punished for not believing what Christians claim? In what way is skepticism regarding the claims of Christ morally wrong?
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Re: Should unbelievers be punished? Why?
Post #31Biblically speaking permanent death is in fact the ultimate punishment for the wicked.
EZELIEL 18:4 - NWT
The soul who sins is the one who will die
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Re: Should unbelievers be punished? Why?
Post #32Which Bible version are you quoting? The ESV says:
In this version belief is not mentioned.If anyone hears my words and does not keep them, I do not judge him...
So, I don’t think there is really any judgment because of disbelief.
Then why believe?
There's another reason people may not "come to the light." They know it's a lot of nonsense.According to the Bible, judgment goes like this:
This is the judgment, that the light has come into the world, and men loved the darkness rather than the light; for their works were evil. For everyone who does evil hates the light, and doesn't come to the light, lest his works would be exposed. But he who does the truth comes to the light, that his works may be revealed, that they have been done in God."
John 3:19-21
Jesus, evidently, never thought of that or at least he never admitted it.
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Re: Should unbelievers be punished? Why?
Post #33Tcg wrote: ↑Mon Aug 03, 2020 3:26 pmIf the Christian god exists, he evidently doesn't bother to make his eternal salvation evident, at least not to the living. Like you say the "saved" go the same way as the unsaved. I understand that Jesus makes a person's eternal fate very obvious post-death when it's too late to choose. You would think that our choice to follow him would come after we know his doctrines are true rather than before we know.unknown soldier wrote: ↑Fri Jul 31, 2020 8:28 pmFortunately, it is highly unlikely that unbelievers will be punished. From all appearances we live our lives and then die never to live again. There no reason to be upset by this, it's just the natural order. Life follows death, permanent death. This is apparently true for believers and unbelievers alike.
As far as I know all religions offer rewards in exchange for belief--rewards that are very often promised to be granted after death. Personally, I'd like the reward right away while I'm living. That way I don't need to die; dying is rough no matter what the reward may be.Many humans find this idea distasteful and have thus developed myriad ideas to ignore it's likelihood. Absent this distaste for death one wonders if religion would have ever gotten off the ground.
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Re: Should unbelievers be punished? Why?
Post #34In that case it makes no difference to me because I know my death will be permanent. I wonder why Jesus died on the cross if the punishment for "the wicked" is, as far as I can tell, no different from the fate of Christians. What did he "save" us from considering that we all die and stay dead?JehovahsWitness wrote: ↑Mon Aug 03, 2020 6:45 pmBiblically speaking permanent death is in fact the ultimate punishment for the wicked.
EZELIEL 18:4 - NWT
The soul who sins is the one who will die
And I also understand that all those Bible passages about everlasting torment in flames, at least to some Christians, are merely metaphors for eternal death. That death would be symbolized by conscious torment in fire is quite a stretch considering that death is rarely if ever attended by flames, and the dead have "no work or thought or knowledge or wisdom." So fire or no fire, the dead cannot be tormented.
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Re: Should unbelievers be punished? Why?
Post #35Then the clergy should pray for less work and more money rather than beg for that money. After all, they tell us to pray for what we need. I wonder why they don't take their own advice.
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Re: Should unbelievers be punished? Why?
Post #36Right. Romans 6:7: For he who has died has been acquitted from [his] sin. There's no more punishment after death. The difference between the wicked and the righteous is resurrection into everlasting life. The meek inherit the earth and live forever upon it.unknown soldier wrote: ↑Mon Aug 03, 2020 7:47 pmIn that case it makes no difference to me because I know my death will be permanent. I wonder why Jesus died on the cross if the punishment for "the wicked" is, as far as I can tell, no different from the fate of Christians. What did he "save" us from considering that we all die and stay dead?JehovahsWitness wrote: ↑Mon Aug 03, 2020 6:45 pmBiblically speaking permanent death is in fact the ultimate punishment for the wicked.
EZELIEL 18:4 - NWT
The soul who sins is the one who will die
And I also understand that all those Bible passages about everlasting torment in flames, at least to some Christians, are merely metaphors for eternal death. That death would be symbolized by conscious torment in fire is quite a stretch considering that death is rarely if ever attended by flames, and the dead have "no work or thought or knowledge or wisdom." So fire or no fire, the dead cannot be tormented.
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Re: Should unbelievers be punished? Why?
Post #37Why would they do that? The idea that their primary motivation is money (and hence they should pray for more money) is entirely your projection and contradicted by the available evidence.unknown soldier wrote: ↑Mon Aug 03, 2020 7:58 pmThen the clergy should pray for less work and more money rather than beg for that money. After all, they tell us to pray for what we need. I wonder why they don't take their own advice.
Last edited by bjs1 on Mon Aug 03, 2020 9:53 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge.
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Re: Should unbelievers be punished? Why?
Post #38You didn't explain how fire and torment can be metaphors for death. I don't think they are metaphors for death but are meant to be taken literally. Jesus was evidently obsessed with the idea or burning his enemies tormenting them eternally.
If he existed and said what he is quoted as saying, then he was a very sick man.
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Re: Should unbelievers be punished? Why?
Post #39Fire isn't a metaphor for death as such, it's symbolic for everlasting destruction. The wicked suffer everlasting destruction meaning not just death, but death without resurrection. Sodom and Gomorrah, for example, aren't literally still burning but serve as a symbol of everlasting destruction. Jude 1:7unknown soldier wrote: ↑Mon Aug 03, 2020 9:35 pmYou didn't explain how fire and torment can be metaphors for death. I don't think they are metaphors for death but are meant to be taken literally. Jesus was evidently obsessed with the idea or burning his enemies tormenting them eternally.
If he existed and said what he is quoted as saying, then he was a very sick man.
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Re: Should unbelievers be punished? Why?
Post #40There are several significant problems with this line of reasoning.unknown soldier wrote: ↑Fri Jul 31, 2020 8:28 pm Why should unbelievers be punished for not believing what Christians claim? In what way is skepticism regarding the claims of Christ morally wrong?
First, as DavidLeon points out in post 3, if a warning is given and ignored then there are natural negative consequences. The skeptic may feel that he has valid reasoning for ignoring a warning. If the warning proves true and he ignores it, no matter the reason, then he will suffer the consequences of whatever the warning was about. To borrow DavidLeon’s analogy, being skeptical about a storm warning (no matter how reasonable or unreasonable the skepticism) will not prevent a person from getting rained on.
If we completely ignore this first problem, then there is a second problem.
Asking if something “should” happen, or if something is “morally wrong,” is built on the idea of objective morality. A theist can point to God as the source of objective morality and say that there is something morally right or morally wrong; that things should be a certain way. Non-theism in its various forms has, as of yet, always relied on subjective morality. A non-theist can ask if some action is against his cultural norms or if it is something that he would personally dislike. However asking if something is morally right or wrong, beyond personal opinion, demands belief in a God of some kind.
If we completely ignore both of these problems, then there is still a third problem.
Skepticism is not itself a position to hold, but a response to someone else’s position. A person might be skeptical of the claims about Christ, but that does not make him a blank sheet with no worldview of his own. He still has his own worldview or philosophy of life. Viewed in this broader sense, it is not sufficient to ask if skepticism of another’s claims deserves to be punished. We must ask if this skeptic’s own worldview, and how well he has abides by it, is worthy of reward.
Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge.
-Charles Darwin
-Charles Darwin