Checkpoint wrote: ↑Mon Aug 10, 2020 8:15 pm
The opposite of eternal life is the absence of eternal (spiritual) life, which is eternal death...
This much I agree with wholeheartedly, with the exception of the very last part, which is not incorrect but incomplete... or not parallel. The opposite of one thing that is spiritual (I agree, life) cannot be another thing that is physical. It may be inadvertent, but you're comparing apples and oranges, as it were. The true opposite "eternal (spiritual) life is eternal (spiritual) death. This permanent condition of death, resulting from the second death, is not physical in nature but spiritual.
Checkpoint wrote: ↑Mon Aug 10, 2020 8:15 pm
...not its eternal self-existence.
"Self-existence"??? LOL! Well that would mean complete autonomy, and no one has ever claimed anything even approaching that... certainly not me, anyway.
At any rate, what God has brought into existence, He will not "wipe from existence," as it is all very good, as He pronounces all of His creation in Genesis 1. Men do not have power over God to make something bad that He made good -- which I know you are not claiming, but is still the effect of your assertions. Men have, however, corrupted what God made very good -- because of the sinful nature he inherited from Adam as a result of Adam's original sin. But God promises to make all things new, and He will, as all God's promises have their 'yes' and 'amen' in Christ. This is the Gospel. Absolutely nowhere in Scripture does God ever say he will wipe from existence anything -- except the tears from the eyes of His Elect and all death, mourning, and crying, and pain (Revelation 21).
Checkpoint wrote: ↑Mon Aug 10, 2020 8:15 pm
The Matthew 25 parable states these two alternatives in two different ways. The one you omitted clarifies and expands on the brief one you included.
No, it doesn't, Checkpoint. Jesus very clearly presents the two alternatives as wholly distinct and mutually exclusive. Surely, you will agree with this. But you are still adding something to what Jesus says in Matthew 25, something that He neither says nor implies, even if inadvertently.
Checkpoint wrote: ↑Mon Aug 10, 2020 8:15 pm
"Eternal punishment" is the penal decision made by the judge. It is final and will never be changed or reversed. It will be executed by the ones convicted departing "into the eternal fire prepared". This "eternal fire", this "punishment", is clearly spoken of in the Bible. Its execution is decisive and lasting.
Absolutely.
Checkpoint wrote: ↑Mon Aug 10, 2020 8:15 pm
2 Peer 2: 6 if He condemned the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah
by burning them to ashes, and made them an example of what is going to happen to the ungodly 9 if this is so, then the Lord knows how to rescue the godly from trials and
to hold the unrighteous for punishment on the Day of Judgment.
Jude: 6 for judgment on that great day. 7 In like manner, Sodom and Gomorrah and the cities around them, who indulged in sexual immorality and pursued strange flesh,
are on display as an example of those who undergo the punishment of eternal fire.
Sure. The fire is indicative and
symbolic of punishment and judgment and the permanence and everlasting nature of those things. The
judgment of the inhabitants -- people -- or Sodom and Gomorrah is most assuredly a type -- divine foreshadowing -- of God's final Judgment, the results of which will be permanent and everlasting... eternal. But again, you're likening what is spiritual to what is physical, which neither Peter nor Jude do.
Too, you may or may not know this, but smoke was
still rising from the site of Sodom and Gomorrah in the first century A.D., and this was taken by the original readers of Jude's letter -- and thus should be taken by us -- as a physical
symbol of eternal divine judgment and its permanence. And this is where the unrepentant are sent -- to a place where they will experience this for eternity.
Checkpoint wrote: ↑Mon Aug 10, 2020 8:15 pm
May the Lord give you His peace, Pinseeker.
You also, Checkpoint. Same to you and more of it!

Grace and peace to you.