Dealing with the idea of Hell

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kodiak

Senior Member
Mar 8, 2015
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Where do we read of Jesus walking the streets with a hateful impersonal sign. Of course that will turn people off; including believers. NOWHERE are we called to do such a thing. The message we are called to bring is: 'Jesus loved you so much that He took your punishment; but be careful because, if you reject His payment for your sins, you need to pay for them yourself.

This message is not to be delivered coldly and impersonally; but personally, in love and honest concern.
This is what I was saying. Yet somehow people get that idea, that is why many of us feel it important to remind everyone on here to not do it that way. We are not saying anyone on here does it that way...I am not saying never talk about hell, but do it in a loving way. I think we all need this reminder occasionally. Thank you for expanding what I was saying.
 
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Tankman131

Guest
Actually, no. Matthew 7 talks about how there are believers who think they know Christ but they are cast out because of their iniquity (sin). Actually the topic of Once Saved Always Saved and Eternal Concious Torment relate to each other. They are both evil doctrines because they both ignore common basic morality. But this is not a surprise. The Scriptures say we would be living in dark times (See 2 Timothy 3:1-9).

As for the secular world: The secular world believes they will die and nothing awaits them. The world does not agree with the Biblical teaching on Dualistic Conditional Immortality. Hell is real. They do not believe in a Hell. Also, the Lake of Fire will destroy them. They do not believe in a Lake of Fire. The Bible says they will be held accountable to God and there will be a Judgment. Also, the Lake of Fire will cause pain for a certain amount of time for the wicked. This is evident in the fact that Jesus said it is better for one to pluck out one's eye.
*facepalm* the secular world agrees with you that eternal punishment is too much and isnt just.

they also agree with you that they create their god in their own image like you. You have been twisting scripture to the point it is unrecognizable at times.
 
Jul 22, 2014
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You mean "us"?
So,.... you ARE saying we are all wrong?
You are on the narrow, and we are on the broad?

Please confirm this.
I wll not be your Judge. God will be people's Judge. But the Scriptures cannot be broken. Narrow is the way that leads unto life and few be there that find it.
 
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Tankman131

Guest
I wll not be your Judge. God will be people's Judge. But the Scriptures cannot be broken. Narrow is the way that leads unto life and few be there that find it.
Thank The Lord they cant be broken, with how far youve twisted them its a miracle they havent.
 
Jul 22, 2014
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*facepalm* the secular world agrees with you that eternal punishment is too much and isnt just.

they also agree with you that they create their god in their own image like you. You have been twisting scripture to the point it is unrecognizable at times.
Yes, Christians themselves have become deceived and believe a lie. Remember, Jesus had a problem with most of the churches (See Revelation 2-3). There are many Biblical cults who believe many things in the Bible that are wrong. Even the world can sometimes see that certain Biblical cults are wrong in what they do. For example: The Westboro Baptist Church is recognized as being wrong by both the world and Christianity because of their hate.
 
Feb 24, 2015
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To those who want an eternal torture scenario, why would God go to so much effort for no benefit.
Sinners are just dis-functional people, who if given the opportunity would just make things worse. The term waste of space is Gods summary.

Look at Gods justice. Break a major sin, death. Touch the ark to steady it, death. Bring the wrong coals to the tent of meeting, death. Hide treasure looted from a city, swallowed by the earth. Sodom and Gommorah blasted of the face of the earth.

Simple solutions so a basic functional problem. Why is the lake of fire going to be any different?
 

Reborn

Senior Member
Nov 16, 2014
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I used to hold to the view that I.... honestly did not know, too. I was on the fence on Eternal Concious Torment and Conditional Immortality for a long while. That is until I did some digging and understood the Conditional Immortality view with Scripture.
Is it okay to teach opinions that constantly change then?

I wll not be your Judge. God will be people's Judge. But the Scriptures cannot be broken. Narrow is the way that leads unto life and few be there that find it.
I agree.
Few do find it.

Btw, You actually mean, what you deem to be the "truth" can not be broken?
You have no idea what this means do you?
 
Jul 22, 2014
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Is it okay to teach opinions that constantly change then?
We are to study to show ourselves approved unto God (2 Timothy 2:15). There are many great men of God who are not perfect and they did not learn everything all at once. Learning is a process by the Spirit. For did you ever teach a verse whereby you think that verse says something differently now?

I agree.
Few do find it.

Btw, You actually mean, what you deem to be the "truth" can not be broken?
You have no idea what this means do you?
Not here to argue with you. For if you are going to insult me, then I think it is best to move on.

May God bless you.
 
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notuptome

Senior Member
May 17, 2013
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Every Christian should have a very real image of how terrible hell is and how long folks will be there. It is not a matter of scaring folks but presenting to them that as nice a heaven will be the lake of fire will not be a pleasant place.

Jesus preached more on hell than He spoke of Heaven. It is that important to make lost souls aware of what awaits them.

Thank God for hearts still tender enough to weep for the lost and to plead with them to be saved.

For the cause of Christ
Roger
 

JesusLives

Senior Member
Oct 11, 2013
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Ok seriously please read posts in context. I was responding to someone who said it was offputting to them.

also you cant understand what Christ died for unless you understand the consequence of your sin.
The wages of sin is DEATH not torture. The gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.
 

Reborn

Senior Member
Nov 16, 2014
4,087
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We are to study to show ourselves approved unto God. Learning is a process by the Spirit. For did you ever teach a verse whereby you think that verse says something differently now?



Not here to argue with you nor am I here to put up with your insults.

May God bless you.
Yes, l have. I saw the error in my ways. I realized i would be held accountable for everything l claim is truth.
That's why l don't teach. I ask questions, like l have been doing with you?

Insults. No, you come here everyday and pretty much state that we are all wrong.
You are basically saying "come to my conclusion on what the truth is, everyone"
You teach. You do not debate. Therefore teachers need heat put on them to expose to all if they bring truth.

You leave when the pot gets hot. You claim its us being nasty, but we are really just questioning your posts.
You don't like that. No one can question the truth you bring here.

This is when you leave the thread.
 
Mar 10, 2015
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So tell me, why would someone care to be forgiven on something they dont understand or know the consequences of?

Why is Romans 6:23 so commonly used by evangelists and people sharing the gospel? Because it succinctly shares the consequences of sin as well as the solution to the problem to a group of people who may not have a conception of what sin is. Why would jesus preach the consequences of sins to jews who have been brought up their whole lives knowing these consequences? Why would Paul bring up sin and damnation when speaking to gentiles? Because they werent brought up with a concept of the consequences of sin.

i get it, you find hell distateful, but it is part of the truth and it has been part of bringing many to christ, my parents included.
I asked once before and you never answered.
How many have you led personally to Jesus Christ young man?

Furthermore Romans 6.23 doe snot say anything about hell, but death. That means more than the lake of fire son.
 

notuptome

Senior Member
May 17, 2013
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The wages of sin is DEATH not torture. The gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Yes eternal death in the lake of fire where the worm dieth not.

For the cause of Christ
Roger
 

JesusLives

Senior Member
Oct 11, 2013
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You are ignoring quite a bit of he Bible that makes it explicitly clear that hell is eternal.

Ten Foundational Verses for Eternal Punishment in Hell | TGC

you are taking your own feelings in the matter and trying to justify them scripturally instead of reading what the scriptures say.
Sodom was also destroyed with eternal fire and is it still burning today? Once the fuel is burned up the fire goes out but Sodom and Gomorah are eternally gone.
 

notuptome

Senior Member
May 17, 2013
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Sodom was also destroyed with eternal fire and is it still burning today? Once the fuel is burned up the fire goes out but Sodom and Gomorah are eternally gone.
The souls lost in Sodom are still burning. The bush burned before Moses and was not consumed. Gods wrath upon sin burns with an intensity that only God can muster.

For the cause of Christ
Roger
 
Mar 10, 2015
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How can they understand Christ's sacrifice if they dont understand their sin and the wages of that sin?
How do you think that happens? I think you are completely backwards to what the Word says and are relying on talking points from doctrine.
 
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skylove7

Guest
I wll not be your Judge. God will be people's Judge. But the Scriptures cannot be broken. Narrow is the way that leads unto life and few be there that find it.
True Jason scripture cannot be broken...but it can be twisted to fit your personal needs to make you feel better. That is what you do. If people offer you truth in the scriptures...and still you wont listen....
I dunno what I can offer...
A cookie?
Im out :)
 
Jul 22, 2014
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Yes, l have. I saw the error in my ways. I realized i would be held accountable for everything l claim is truth.
That's why l don't teach. I ask questions, like l have been doing with you?
Which is not a Biblical concept. Jesus said to Peter, that if he loved him, he would feed his sheep. The Bible actually says we are to preach the Word.

Insults. No,
I disagree strongly. You primarily seek to attack me and you do not stick to the Scriptures.

you come here everyday and pretty much state that we are all wrong.
As you come here everyday and state that I am wrong. But the thing is... we cannot both be right. In fact, I know the God I worship is not the same one you worship. My God does not ignore morality. Granted, I do not believe ECT (Eternal Concious Torment) is a salvation issue, but I do know that if one holds to the concept that they can sin and still be saved is not teaching the truth of God's Word (Whether it be just one sin or a lot of sin).

You are basically saying "come to my conclusion on what the truth is, everyone"
You teach. You do not debate. Therefore teachers need heat put on them to expose to all if they bring truth.
Did not Jesus, Paul, and the others speak in the same way? Did they not lay down the truth and claim everyone else as false?

You leave when the pot gets hot.
I leave when people start to gang up on me and they just want to insult me instead of dealing with the Scriptures.

You claim its us being nasty,
Which is a true claim.

but we are really just questioning your posts.
You don't like that. No one can question the truth you bring here.

This is when you leave the thread.
No, the Bible verses I bring forth sometimes don't even go answered from your camp. Many times I keep trying to stick to the Scriptures and yet everyone on your side just seeks to primarily insult me. Therein lies the difference. You cannot see it, because you choose not to see it.
 
Jul 22, 2014
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True Jason scripture cannot be broken...but it can be twisted to fit your personal needs to make you feel better. That is what you do. If people offer you truth in the scriptures...and still you wont listen....
I dunno what I can offer...
A cookie?
Im out :)
Not true. Nobody has ever tried to really explain the verses that I brought up; They just keep re-hashing the same verses that support their view. While I do respond to the verses they think supports ECT, they just do not want to see it. They also cannot make a real world example out of what they believe and they cannot explain the goodness of God in Him torturing people for all eternity.
 

JesusLives

Senior Member
Oct 11, 2013
14,554
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[h=1]Got this off the Truth According to Scripture site. Question was Who started Hell teaching?

The Origin of Hell-Fire in Christian Teaching[/h]Grk/Heb Fonts



Books that will challenge your current Biblical perspective.






The concept of a soul within us that cannot die first became a ‘Christian’ doctrine at the end of the second century AD. Hell had been taught in Greek philosophy long before the time of Jesus, with Plato (427-347 BC) as the important leader in this thinking.

The teaching of an everlasting place of punishment for the wicked is the natural consequence of a belief in an immortal soul. By the year AD 187, it was understood that life, once we have it, is compulsory; there is no end to it, either now or in a world to come. We have no choice as to its continuance, even if we were to commit suicide to end it.

At the end of the 2nd century Christianity had begun to blend Greek philosophy —human speculative reasoning, with the teachings of God’s Word. Such words and phrases as ‘continuance of being’, ‘perpetual existence’, ‘incapable of dissolution’ and ‘incorruptible’ began to appear in so-called Christian writings. These had come straight from Plato, the Greek philosopher, all those years before Jesus. Other phrases used were ‘the soul to remain by itself immortal’, and ‘an immortal nature’. It was taught that this is how God made us. But this idea derives from philosophy, not divine inspiration. There are no such words in the Bible. It was Athenagorus, a Christian, but whose teachings, according to the Encyclopaedia Britannica, were strongly tinged with Platonism, who had introduced the teaching of an immortal soul into Christianity. In this way, he paved the way for the logical introduction of eternal torment for immortal, but sinful, souls. This was a hundred years and more after the time of the apostles, and came straight from popular philosophy. The apostles had consistently taught that death is a sleep, to be followed by resurrection. The early church leaders – Clement, Ignatius, Hermas, Polycarp, and others who also believed that death is a sleep, taught that the wicked are destroyed forever by fire – their punishment was to be annihilation. These leaders did not teach of an immortal soul to be tortured by fire in hell for eternity.

About AD 240 Tertullian of Carthage took up the teaching of an immortal soul. It was he who added the further, but logical dimension. He taught the endless torment of the immortal soul of the wicked was parallel to the eternal blessedness of the saved, with no sleep of death after this life.

This came at a time when many Christians were being burned for their faith and it was natural for them to accept that their persecutors would at death be consigned to an ever-burning hell for the persecution they had inflicted on others while they went straight to eternal bliss.

From the third century the darkness of the infiltration of man-made beliefs into Christianity deepened until the Dark Ages had smothered almost all the light of God’s Word. At the beginning of this time, the first attempts were made to create a systematic set of beliefs. It is not surprising that an ever-burning hell and the immortality of the soul were prominently included.

It is at this time that such beliefs, held by most Christians today, had their origin. An ever-burning hell has remained a commonly taught doctrine of the Christian religion to this day. It was not based on the Bible but on philosophy. Bible verses were later sought to uphold the ancient philosophies of the Greeks, and added to the teaching.

Eventually under the influence of Augustine, AD 430, the concept of endless conscious torment was brought into general acceptance by the Catholic Church in the Western world. He taught that all souls were deathless and consequently the lost would experience endless fires of punishment, immediately upon the end of this life.

Purgatory and places of purification.
Other pagan philosophers, along with some of the poets of the day, were repulsed by the immorality of this teaching, and developed the idea of a place where the fleshly body was purified by fire but, at the completion of purification, would find release. It was a middle way between heaven and hell. This concept had its origin in Persian teaching. From there it passed to certain Jewish groups, and later was taken into Christian thought and teaching.

It arose out of the Gnostic idea that the body, flesh and matter, is inherently evil and must be purified and purged by fire elsewhere. But we know bodies can be exhumed for examination, so it cannot be true that the flesh goes elsewhere.
A similar view was held in Egypt, with prayers and services for the dead and payments made to priests for them to intercede for the dead. The idea of a place like purgatory did not have its beginnings in the Christian church, but in ancient pagan religions. The foundations had been established by Augustine’s teaching of eternal hell. Purgatory was added, and later fully confirmed by Pope Gregory the Great, about 582. Purgatory could not be supported by the standard canon of the Bible and it was the books of the Apocrypha that were used to justify this new idea.

A similar teaching appeared in Moslem and Jewish belief. The inhabitants of the world were seen as good, bad and ‘middling’. It was believed that, if one died with curable offences, these would be purified by pain and torment as a preparation for heavenly bliss. By 1439 the teaching of purgatory, with services and prayers for the dead, to spare them years of this pain, was fully accepted in the Western Catholic world – Italy, Spain, England, France, and was ratified by Pope Eugenius IV. It was not known or taught in Eastern Christianity, which was not influenced by Rome.

It is sometimes taught that even the righteous go to such a place for a lesser time so that the stains of sin can be burned from them, and this can be greatly hastened if certain exercises are undertaken. At the end of this time any that are incorrigible are sent to hell forever and the righteous go to a place of eternal blessedness.

Heaven and hell are seen to be existing together side by side forever and ever. This means that Jesus the Saviour can never see an end of the sin and misery He came to die for. Any teaching of the eternal co-existence of evil and good is not in the Bible, but is a teaching from Greek philosophy.

The Waldenses who had fled to the mountains to remain free from the heresies that were developing in the Catholic Church and also to escape persecution, taught the sleep of death and instant destruction by fire at the resurrection of the wicked. Their persecuting inquisitors reported that they entirely rejected the teaching of purgatory. The Cathari and the Hussites also rejected hell, thus leading the way for the teachings of the later Reformers.

The Reformers
The Reformers strongly rejected hell and purgatory, because by this time the teaching had become heavily corrupted by the sale of indulgences. These were the payments made to the priests to reduce the years of purification spent in purgatory.
Wycliffe taught that death was an unconscious sleep, as did Tyndale and Luther, (although it has to be said that Luther was not always consistent in his beliefs.) They taught neither hell or purgatory. They taught that ‘men are breath in bodies’ and not ‘souls in bodies‘.

Calvin, however, taught that those who were sinners went to the eternal pains of hell at the time of their death and even denied a middle place or purgatory. The Reformed churches, like Calvin, have generally maintained a belief in an immortal soul and hell-fire, but do not teach purgatory

The Resurrection and Hell.
How do the concept of an ever-burning hell and the Bible teaching of resurrection fit together? Over the centuries there has been a blending of Bible teachings with the teachings of men. It was known that the Bible speaks of resurrection, and also of death by fire. The compromise view sees the body being resurrected and rejoining its soul again and then both being tormented together by fire.

Athenagorus taught that a person can never die or come to an end; life is ours for always. He taught that we have been made intelligent just for the purpose of continuing life - even if it be in Hell. He also taught that a body is given to the soul, and we are born into this world to pass through this life as two entities. These two are separated at death but, at the resurrection, the body rejoins the soul. He taught that punishment must be given for sins committed in this body and so the body needs to suffer punishment also. During the period of separation from its soul it is said, the body is in the grave. He argued consistently that God made us to live, and therefore we live eternally even though it is a living death in torment.

What is the fate of the wicked?
The theologian Origen of Alexandria developed another, different view of the fate of the wicked. He postulated that the wicked would be forgiven and restored by God and so in the end all would be saved. There would be universal salvation. Some of his followers believe that even Satan will be saved.

But there was yet another view, that of Irenaeus, who taught that the wicked would be destroyed. All trace of wickedness would be removed from the earth by a devouring fire.

No second chance.
The Bible is clear that our choice, for Him or against Him, is made in this world, here and now. There is no mention of a second chance in the Bible, or a time when all people will be changed and restored to the Lord. This view of universal salvation is also mythology that has crept into the Christian world. It gives a more comfortable picture than judgement and death, but a second chance is false hope. Its origin is in the thinking of Greek philosophy.

In Summary

* There is no ever-burning hell with an eternity of torture.
* There is no such place as purgatory.
* There is no universal restoration of all sinners.

I know this is long, however, makes for interesting reading if you take the time. Blond.