tam wrote: ↑Mon Aug 09, 2021 8:59 pm
Well then you would not be right.
I'm... well aware of your oft-stated, repeated (see what I did there?) opinion.
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
PinSeeker wrote: ↑Mon Aug 09, 2021 6:05 pm
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
For what reason has man decided that 'their worm does not die' = eternal pain and anguish?
Put very simply, it is what it is.
So no reason then except that "man says so".
Well, only if it weren't what God says in His Word... and what Jesus says... which is the same thing (and, as you would hopefully agree, is what really matters). And, anticipating your retort, that gets us back to the answer immediately above.
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
As I said, the phrase comes from a verse in Isaiah (66:24)...
Yes, I know precisely where it comes from. We should take great care -- as Jesus did in Mark 9 -- with the symbolism used by the Isaiah not only in Isaiah 66, but throughout his prophecy. And again we are back to the first answer above. I'll leave it at that.
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
PinSeeker wrote: ↑Mon Aug 09, 2021 6:05 pm
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
I know this - not because I am interpreting the phrase - but because of what my Lord teaches about His Father (including the love and mercy of the Father), about the lake of fire, and the judgment.
I say the exact same thing. One of us is wrong.
You don't say the exact same thing. You said (at the top of the post) that it would be right to say that what you are presenting is just an interpretation. That is not the same thing as listening to what Christ teaches about His Father (including the love and mercy of His Father), about the lake of fire, and the judgment.
Ah, so now we're going to start arguing about what I say and don't say... LOL! Okay, let me clarify (as if that should be necessary): Both what you are saying and what I am saying are "interpretations" in the sense that they are different understandings of the same texts. So we are both in the same boat as far as that goes. Further, we both say that these understandings that we have -- different as they may be -- we have received from the Lord, so yes, we both say the exact same thing as far as that goes.
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
PinSeeker wrote: ↑Mon Aug 09, 2021 6:05 pm
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
PinSeeker wrote: ↑Mon Aug 09, 2021 6:05 pm
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
Also because - despite people's best attempts at contorting the meaning of the word love - eternal torment is not from love.
Ah, so we are back to the real issue -- at least one of them -- which is what we think love is. And again, the torment is just the internal reaction of the unrepentant. Torment is not of God, as He, of course, does not sin.
Thankfully, for everyone's sake, God's ways are higher than man's ways.
That they are, for sure. And this is also true of love. I would argue that God's punishment of sin is most certainly part of His love; it would be unloving for God
not to punish sin.
Unending punishment just for the sake of punishment? There is no point to that. There is no purpose.
No, for the sake of justice. His perfect justice... for His sake first -- His glory -- and then for ours as those who love Him. So there
is a point, a purpose (as there is to everything He does) -- His -- and, as Job says, His purposes cannot be thwarted.
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
Eternal punishment (of a conscious, existing, person) serves no purpose, produces nothing good, teaches nothing. Discipline is from love, certainly. But discipline is about teaching, refining, producing something good. Eternal punishment (of a conscious, existing, person) serves no purpose, produces nothing good, teaches nothing. So where is the love in it?
How can you (or I) make any judgment about what is eternally good or bad? You (and I) can't, because you are not (and I am not) eternal -- of eternity (
yet...

). Like you said, and I wholeheartedly agree -- because God says it in Isaiah 55 -- His thoughts are not our thoughts, our ways not His. His ways are much higher than our ways, His thoughts much higher than ours. And like David says (in Psalm 139), such knowledge is too wonderful for us; it is high, and we cannot attain it.
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
As Paul says in Roman 9:21-24... Nothing in there about eternal torment. Do note the word destruction, though.
Right, Paul is speaking of God's purposes here, and tormenting folks is not and never will be among those purposes... because, for sure, sin of any kind is not His purpose, only righteousness and His glory. But the
punishment of sin and those who are unrepentant of it is/are certainly among His purposes, though, precisely because His chief end is His righteousness and glory. The eternal reality of such (destruction) is chief among the annihilationist's misunderstandings. God will deliver the sinner, because of His judgment -- which is demanded by His
justice, which must be upheld
because of His righteousness and glory -- of unrepentant sinners, who remain in their sin, to utter ruin. This is their destruction.
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
for some reason, man thinks sin must be punished with something much worse than death.
Ah! So you admit there is a punishment much worse than annihilation! Well that's a step in the right direction. Yes, like I have said, speaking from our perspective -- or rather putting it in terms we can readily understand -- life imprisonment is, really, much worse than the death penalty. And, carrying it just a bit further, this punishment, life imprisonment, is a lasting torment, and those experiencing and enduring this life imprisonment are anguished.
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
PinSeeker wrote: ↑Mon Aug 09, 2021 6:05 pm
God created us in His image. A part of that is that we will exist -- in one place or the other

-- in the age to come (eternity).
God created Adam in His image.
And Adam is the federal head of the human race. What Adam was, we are.
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
We are not in the image of God right now.
We are. Not perfectly, as a result of Adam's fall in Genesis 3, but we are.
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
...we (if we are in Christ) are being MADE INTO the image of Christ...
Right, we are being made like God, into the image of Christ, as you say. And one day this will be complete -- which is a certainty, so we can live as if it is complete now. Paul is very clear in this. Our identity is now in Christ.
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
...who is Himself the image of God.
Right, He is God. And we will be like Him, we will finally be conformed to Him. Not that we will ever be Him, of course, but we will be like Him.
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
If we are BEING MADE INTO something, we are not
currently that thing.
Right, but your way in getting here is fraught with error. Ah... no offense intended, sorry... You're referring to what Paul says in Colossians 1:15 (in addition to 1st and 2nd Corinthians; Paul really says the same things in all his letters, but often in different ways). Yes, Christ
is the image of the invisible God, and we are merely
in the image of God... which is no mere thing, of course, but a far different thing than actually
being the image of God.
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
THEREFORE, just because Adam was made in the image of God, doesn't mean that Adam had ALL the same attributes as God.
Yeah, I'm not sure how you got off on this rabbit trail (of sorts; surely not to say that it actually is a rabbit trail...

), but I have never said or insinuated anything remotely contradictory to what you say here. Adam and Eve (and thus we, as their progeny) are God's creation -- creatures, as opposed to the Creator.
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
So this is just one false premise that the doctrine of 'eternal torment in hell' is based upon.
Another opinion...
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
PinSeeker wrote: ↑Fri Aug 06, 2021 1:08 pm
Luke 16 and Revelation 20 most certainly do, and you're taking John 5 in isolation from those two passages, which should not be done.
None of those passages speak of unending pain and torment.
Another opinion. They do, actually:
- Directly from Luke 16, "(t)he rich man also died and was buried, and in Hades, being in torment..." and ..."in anguish in this flame..." was told that "...between (Abraham and his progeny) and (him, who represents all the unrepentant) a great chasm has been fixed, in order that those who would pass from (where Abraham is) to (where the rich man is) may not be able, and none may cross from (where the rich man is) to (where Abraham and his progeny are).
- Directly from Revelation 20, "...the devil who had deceived them was thrown into the lake of fire and sulfur where the beast and the false prophet were, and they will be tormented day and night forever and ever... "...if anyone’s name was not found written in the book of life, he was thrown into the lake of fire."
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
Eternal torment and anguish are not in view in Psalm 9:15-17
They are. Just because they are not explicitly mentioned does not mean they are not in view. If I say, "Tammy went to town," obviously, Tammy when to town for some reason.

Or, well, experienced something while there...
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
15 The nations have fallen into the pit they have dug;
their feet are caught in the net they have hidden.
16 The Lord is known by his acts of justice;
the wicked are ensnared by the work of their hands.
17 The wicked go down to the realm of the dead,
all the nations that forget God.
So where is it? Where is this eternal torment and anguish mentioned in Psalm 9:15-17?
It is implied in verse 17, as I said. They will experience... something... in the realm of the dead. See above.
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
PinSeeker wrote: ↑Mon Aug 09, 2021 6:05 pm
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
I don't recall saying that Sheol had a good connotation.
Not sure why you would say this. I don't recall ever saying or insinuating that you did.
You had emphasized that Sheol had a negative connotation. I'm not sure why you did that unless you thought I was saying it was something good.
LOL! Okay, sorry, you misunderstood what I was saying, I guess... Hoo, boy.
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
PinSeeker wrote: ↑Mon Aug 09, 2021 6:05 pm
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
But sheol is not that place of judgment. The dead come OUT Of the world of the dead to stand before the throne, some being resurrected to LIFE and some being resurrected to judgment (and so, the second death). Those who receive the resurrection of judgment (and the second death) are not cast back into Sheol.
But Sheol, Tammy -- Death and Hades ultimately go into the "lake of fire" with the devil and his minions and the unrepentant.
Yes,
death and hades go into the lake of fire.
Right, along with anyone whose name was not found written in the book of life, who, like the devil and the beast and the false prophet, will be tormented day and night forever and ever. Not to say that death and Hades will be tormented like the devil and his minions and the unrepentant, but death and Hades will no longer be in the presence of -- in the sense of being a possibility for -- those whose names are found in the book of life. Right now, though, even we, as Psalm 23 says, walk through the valley of the shadow of death.
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
Yes, death and hades go into the lake of fire. Where is it mentioned that those who are resurrected to judgment and the second death go back into Sheol?
See above.
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
PinSeeker wrote: ↑Mon Aug 09, 2021 6:05 pm
This will take us back to your annihilation... uh, stuff... again, I'm sure. Yet again, what should be understood here is that all that -- death, Hades, the devil and his minions, and unrepentant sinners and the possibility of entering into or experiencing or being in the presence of these things are permanently removed from the new heaven and new earth of Revelation 21.
Well, annihilation is a pretty permanent removal.
So is being sent to "outer darkness."
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
PinSeeker wrote: ↑Mon Aug 09, 2021 6:05 pm
tam wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 5:49 pm
Everything that occurs in Matt 25 occurs at the return of Christ (which I think you agree), but to people who are yet alive on the earth when He returns. There is no mention of a resurrection (of the dead), or the judgment, because the resurrection of the dead (from Rev 20) has not yet happened.
Yeah, we've discussed this at length, too.
We have, but no matter what order you set forth, the fact remains that there is no mention of the resurrection of the dead and judgment at the return of Christ (see Matt 25, for instance).
The reason there is no mention of it, is because it does not happen at this time (at the return of Christ).
Right, because
in the context of Matthew 25:31-46, it (Christ's return) has
already happened. That's the immediate point here, for goodness's sake. Christ
has to return first
before the resurrection and the final Judgment, because
that's what necessarily has to precede the resurrection and Judgment, because otherwise it
cannot happen, because
He is the executer of the resurrection and Judgment. LOL!
Whew!!!

Okay. Grace and peace to you.