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Annihilationism, Nirvana and Atheism.

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  • #76
    Originally posted by 37818 View Post
    Read Ephesians 2:1 . . . . Please give your understanding of being dead as spoken there. Thanks.
    Do you agree that those who are dead in their trespasses and sins are not literally dead? So given that they are not literally dead, the passage uses the term "dead" in a figurative sense.

    Comment


    • #77
      Originally posted by Timothy View Post
      "And you did he make alive, when ye were dead..."
      If "dead" doesn't mean "dead", but "alive" instead of "dead", then how did God make "alive" those who "were alive (dead)" If they are alive and not dead, then they can't be made alive.
      You're conflating spiritual and physical death. If one can be suffering estrangement from God while they still exist, then why can't Hell be the same way? And remember, we agree that the mortality of the soul is irrelevant to the discussion.
      O Gladsome Light of the Holy Glory of the Immortal Father, Heavenly, Holy, Blessed Jesus Christ! Now that we have come to the setting of the sun and behold the light of evening, we praise God Father, Son and Holy Spirit. For meet it is at all times to worship Thee with voices of praise. O Son of God and Giver of Life, therefore all the world doth glorify Thee.

      A neat video of dead languages!

      Comment


      • #78
        Originally posted by Timothy View Post
        "And you did he make alive, when ye were dead..."
        If "dead" doesn't mean "dead", but "alive" instead of "dead", then how did God make "alive" those who "were alive (dead)" If they are alive and not dead, then they can't be made alive.
        Of course those who are spiritually dead are not physically dead in Eph. 2, but spiritual death is just as real as physical death. We're not taught of only one kind of real death, physical death, for we're not taught that we exist only as a physical body (Matt. 10:28; 1 Thess. 5:23).
        Last edited by Anthropos; 12-10-2014, 02:17 PM. Reason: clarity

        Comment


        • #79
          Originally posted by Timothy View Post
          Do you agree that those who are dead in their trespasses and sins are not literally dead? So given that they are not literally dead, the passage uses the term "dead" in a figurative sense.
          That explains your view. Thanks. I unerstand Adam & Eve died spiritually that very day as in Genesis 2:17 & Genesis 3:6. The serpent having lied (Genesis 3:4; John 8:44), in effect murdering them..
          Last edited by 37818; 12-10-2014, 02:13 PM.
          . . . the gospel of Christ: for it is the power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth; . . . -- Romans 1:16 KJV

          . . . that Christ died for our sins according to the scriptures; And that he was buried, and that he rose again the third day according to the scriptures: . . . -- 1 Corinthians 15:3-4 KJV

          Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God: . . . -- 1 John 5:1 KJV

          Comment


          • #80
            Originally posted by 37818 View Post
            That explains your view. Thanks. I unerstand Adam & Eve died spiritually that very day as in Genesis 2:17 & Genesis 3:6. The serpent having lied (Genesis 3:4; John 8:44), in effect murdering them..
            I don't see any evidence in the Bible that Adam and Eve died the day of the first sin. According to Genesis 5:5, Adam died much later. There is no mention of Adam dying (in any way) before that. I have heard a lot of people say to me that Adam died "spiritually" that same day, but nobody has shown me where the Bible says that they died spiritually that day.

            Comment


            • #81
              Originally posted by Kelp(p) View Post
              You're conflating spiritual and physical death. If one can be suffering estrangement from God while they still exist, then why can't Hell be the same way? And remember, we agree that the mortality of the soul is irrelevant to the discussion.
              No, I am not "conflating spiritual and physical death". I read what the passage said, and I didn't add "spiritual death" to the passage. Did you know that the term "spiritual death" never occurs in the Bible? I know that "spiritual death" is very popular, it just isn't Biblical.

              If one can be suffering estrangement from God while they still exist, then why can't Hell be the same way?
              Because Jesus said that the body and soul would be destroyed in hell.

              Comment


              • #82
                Originally posted by Timothy View Post
                No, I am not "conflating spiritual and physical death". I read what the passage said, and I didn't add "spiritual death" to the passage. Did you know that the term "spiritual death" never occurs in the Bible? I know that "spiritual death" is very popular, it just isn't Biblical.
                Don't give me that fundamentalist "if the exact word isn't in the Bible, then I don't believe in it," crap. You're smarter than that.

                Spiritual death is moral estrangement from God. If you're going to take human depravity at all seriously you have to recognize this. Otherwise Adam and Eve would have ceased existing once they ate the fruit. And even if it is "just a metaphor," that still refutes your insistence on interpreting the second death as literal cessation of existence.

                Originally posted by Timothy View Post
                Because Jesus said that the body and soul would be destroyed in hell.
                That doesn't refute my point. You've not provided a concrete reason for either insisting that there is only one kind of death in Scripture or for interpreting death of the soul literally here (I could also invoke Colossians 3:3 for either side, I reckon). If the damned are bodily thrown into the lake of fire and then preserved there by God to suffer, then the final death of the body is also metaphorical in way.

                Think about this way. Christ says not to fear those that can destroy the body. But what do we fear when we fear death at the hands of our fellow man? If someone strangles me, my body is still there. If I get cremated, say, my body will just sit in the funeral home until that happens. After that, if you really want to get pedantic, my ashes will still be here too.

                I'm not afraid of getting cremated because I won't be in this body for the sensation. All I fear is the initial death by strangling.



                Even looking at in terms of the tradition of exegesis, annihlationism loses. Your side has Arnobius and maybe St. Justin Martyr. I have every other Church Father. Annihlationism is almost as alien to Christianity as hyperpreterism is. That doesn't prove anything, true. But it does give one great pause.
                Last edited by Kelp(p); 12-11-2014, 07:52 AM.
                O Gladsome Light of the Holy Glory of the Immortal Father, Heavenly, Holy, Blessed Jesus Christ! Now that we have come to the setting of the sun and behold the light of evening, we praise God Father, Son and Holy Spirit. For meet it is at all times to worship Thee with voices of praise. O Son of God and Giver of Life, therefore all the world doth glorify Thee.

                A neat video of dead languages!

                Comment


                • #83
                  Originally posted by Timothy View Post
                  I don't see any evidence in the Bible that Adam and Eve died the day of the first sin. According to Genesis 5:5, Adam died much later. There is no mention of Adam dying (in any way) before that. I have heard a lot of people say to me that Adam died "spiritually" that same day, but nobody has shown me where the Bible says that they died spiritually that day.
                  No where in the written word of God will you find the phrase "spiritual death" either. God told Adam that day he would die (Genesis 2:17). Else the serpent told the truth and God did lie. Do you have a third choice?
                  . . . the gospel of Christ: for it is the power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth; . . . -- Romans 1:16 KJV

                  . . . that Christ died for our sins according to the scriptures; And that he was buried, and that he rose again the third day according to the scriptures: . . . -- 1 Corinthians 15:3-4 KJV

                  Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God: . . . -- 1 John 5:1 KJV

                  Comment


                  • #84
                    Don't give me that fundamentalist "if the exact word isn't in the Bible, then I don't believe in it," crap.
                    That is not an honest statement. Fundamentalists are Tinitarian for example.
                    . . . the gospel of Christ: for it is the power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth; . . . -- Romans 1:16 KJV

                    . . . that Christ died for our sins according to the scriptures; And that he was buried, and that he rose again the third day according to the scriptures: . . . -- 1 Corinthians 15:3-4 KJV

                    Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God: . . . -- 1 John 5:1 KJV

                    Comment


                    • #85
                      Originally posted by 37818 View Post
                      That is not an honest statement. Fundamentalists are Tinitarian for example.
                      Some are and when they are they are often so inconsistently. Fundamentalism is not merely (and I would argue, hardly at all anymore) "the adherence to the 1910 document called The Fundamentals." The word has evolved (in the context of Christianity, at least) to denote a kind of anti-intellectual Biblical hyperliteralism that rejects all reference to outside scholarship as being antithetical to faith.

                      It is true that not all Fundamentalists reject all terms outside the Bible. It is an intellectual phenomenon that occurs among fundamentalists, though. Here's a salient example I found the other day. To his credit the author doesn't straight up say that he rejects the term because it is not found in the Bible, he merely implies it. http://www.jesus-is-savior.com/False...ble_church.htm This guy obviously would not accept the concept of the church invisible unless one showed him a verse saying, "There is an invisible church."
                      Last edited by Kelp(p); 12-11-2014, 09:10 AM. Reason: grammar and sentence structure clean-ups
                      O Gladsome Light of the Holy Glory of the Immortal Father, Heavenly, Holy, Blessed Jesus Christ! Now that we have come to the setting of the sun and behold the light of evening, we praise God Father, Son and Holy Spirit. For meet it is at all times to worship Thee with voices of praise. O Son of God and Giver of Life, therefore all the world doth glorify Thee.

                      A neat video of dead languages!

                      Comment


                      • #86
                        Originally posted by Kelp(p) View Post
                        Some are and when they are they are often so inconsistently. Fundamentalism is not merely (and I would argue, hardly at all anymore) "the adherence to the 1910 document called The Fundamentals." The word has evolved (in the context of Christianity, at least) to denote a kind of anti-intellectual Biblical hyperliteralism that rejects all reference to outside scholarship as being antithetical to faith.

                        It is true that not all Fundamentalists reject all terms outside the Bible. It is an intellectual phenomenon that occurs among fundamentalists, though. Here's a salient example I found the other day. To his credit the author doesn't straight up say that he rejects the term because it is not found in the Bible, he merely implies it. http://www.jesus-is-savior.com/False...ble_church.htm This guy obviously would not accept the concept of the church invisible unless one showed him a verse saying, "There is an invisible church."
                        "An hypocrite with [his] mouth destroyeth his neighbour: . . ." -- Proverbs 11:9.

                        You still committed an ad hominem attack.

                        I'm also fundamentalist when it comes to the Bible.
                        . . . the gospel of Christ: for it is the power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth; . . . -- Romans 1:16 KJV

                        . . . that Christ died for our sins according to the scriptures; And that he was buried, and that he rose again the third day according to the scriptures: . . . -- 1 Corinthians 15:3-4 KJV

                        Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God: . . . -- 1 John 5:1 KJV

                        Comment


                        • #87
                          Originally posted by Timothy View Post
                          No, I am not "conflating spiritual and physical death". I read what the passage said, and I didn't add "spiritual death" to the passage. Did you know that the term "spiritual death" never occurs in the Bible? I know that "spiritual death" is very popular, it just isn't Biblical.
                          Do you believe it's unbiblical to speak of "physical death" too?

                          Comment


                          • #88
                            Originally posted by 37818 View Post
                            "An hypocrite with [his] mouth destroyeth his neighbour: . . ." -- Proverbs 11:9.

                            You still committed an ad hominem attack.
                            It wasn't an ad hom. It was an insult (and a warranted one at that). Learn the difference.

                            An ad hominem (Latin for "to the man" or "to the person"), short for argumentum ad hominem, means responding to arguments by attacking a person's character, rather than to the content of their arguments.
                            http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ad_hominem

                            Originally posted by 37818 View Post
                            I'm also fundamentalist when it comes to the Bible.
                            If its in the old sense, good for you. I think inerrancy is untenable, but whatever.

                            If it's in the new sense, then get that Latin out of your signature and quit with the godless study of logic (I'm only half kidding).
                            O Gladsome Light of the Holy Glory of the Immortal Father, Heavenly, Holy, Blessed Jesus Christ! Now that we have come to the setting of the sun and behold the light of evening, we praise God Father, Son and Holy Spirit. For meet it is at all times to worship Thee with voices of praise. O Son of God and Giver of Life, therefore all the world doth glorify Thee.

                            A neat video of dead languages!

                            Comment


                            • #89
                              Originally posted by Kelp(p) View Post
                              Don't give me that fundamentalist "if the exact word isn't in the Bible, then I don't believe in it," crap. You're smarter than that.

                              Spiritual death is moral estrangement from God. If you're going to take human depravity at all seriously you have to recognize this. Otherwise Adam and Eve would have ceased existing once they ate the fruit. And even if it is "just a metaphor," that still refutes your insistence on interpreting the second death as literal cessation of existence.

                              That doesn't refute my point. You've not provided a concrete reason for either insisting that there is only one kind of death in Scripture or for interpreting death of the soul literally here (I could also invoke Colossians 3:3 for either side, I reckon). If the damned are bodily thrown into the lake of fire and then preserved there by God to suffer, then the final death of the body is also metaphorical in way.

                              Think about this way. Christ says not to fear those that can destroy the body. But what do we fear when we fear death at the hands of our fellow man? If someone strangles me, my body is still there. If I get cremated, say, my body will just sit in the funeral home until that happens. After that, if you really want to get pedantic, my ashes will still be here too.

                              I'm not afraid of getting cremated because I won't be in this body for the sensation. All I fear is the initial death by strangling.



                              Even looking at in terms of the tradition of exegesis, annihlationism loses. Your side has Arnobius and maybe St. Justin Martyr. I have every other Church Father. Annihlationism is almost as alien to Christianity as hyperpreterism is. That doesn't prove anything, true. But it does give one great pause.
                              I never said "if the exact word isn't in the Bible, then I don't believe in it" and you know that I didn't. If you need to put words in MY mouth just to win an argument, your proof is not very good.
                              Annihilationism says that the wicked will be destroyed and will be no more. If that is alien to the Bible, then the Bible is alien to the Bible.
                              Here's the thing, The Bible actually says that the wicked will be destroyed and the wicked will be no more, but the Bible NEVER says that the wicked will go to hell when they die where they will be tormented alive forever. And it is not true that you have "every church father" on your side. That is absolutely false. Irenaeus said that the wicked will have a discontinuance of existence. Also the rest of the Church Fathers quote the Bible, and your side has the unfortunate tendency to read eternal conscious torment into everything. If the church fathers quote Matthew 25:46, your side counts it as proof that the CFs believe in eternal conscious torment, even though Matt 25:46 doesn't say eternal torment, it says eternal punishment.

                              And you say that Jesus' statement that the body and soul will be destroyed in hell doesn't prove your your point wrong that the wicked can exist in hell. Jesus said that they are destroyed, that proves that they are destroyed and proves your point wrong that they are not destroyed.

                              You haven't got a biblical leg to stand on for eternal conscious torment in hell.

                              Comment


                              • #90
                                Originally posted by Anthropos View Post
                                Do you believe it's unbiblical to speak of "physical death" too?
                                I believe that Jesus Christ will return to resurrect the dead, and then the dead will no longer be dead, they will be alive. And He will give eternal life to those who have put their faith in Him, and those that reject Him will return to death. I believe what the Bible says. When the Bible says "death" do you find that it always says either "physical death" or "spiritual death"?
                                Do you think that it is wrong to believe what the Bible says instead of traditions?

                                Comment

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